AN exhibition of Scottish heart patients bearing their scars will be back in focus this week at a major health event.

ScarredFORlife will be exhibited at a conference aimed at cardiologists, which is being held at the Royal Physicians and Surgeons in Glasgow.

The project was created by three friends, all born with a heart condition, Dr Liza Morton, Evening Times reporter Caroline Wilson and Jenny Kumar, on behalf of adult heart charity The Somerville Foundation.

They wanted to celebrate the medical advances that are helping to ensure more children survive into adulthood and to help remove the stigma of scars.

Project leaders are now aiming to target the medical profession to help close a gap in the number of doctors specialising in CHD in Scotland.

Dr Liza Morton, Scottish Campaign Manager of the Sommerville Foundation said: “We’re delighted to show our 'Scarred FOR Life' photo exhibition to the cardiology profession, both to thank them for the pioneering work that has led to our survival and to raise the profile of congenital heart disease with the aim of attracting more cardiologists and medics into this niche speciality.”

Congenital Heart Disease (CHD) describes any heart condition present from birth.

It is the most common complex birth defect, which affects 1 in 125 babies and has no cure.

In the 1940s, only 20 per cent of infants born with a heart condition survived, whereas today around 90 per cent are now reaching adulthood.

The event, on Friday, March 4, is a collaboration between the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow and the British Cardiovascular Society.