A campaign group representing women who had their wombs removed unnecessarily by Dr Michael Neary tonight said awards of up to €380,000 would be an acknowledgement of their suffering.
It is understood under a redress scheme for the women affected by the disgraced obstetrician individual awards will range between €60,000 and €380,000.
Judge Maureen Harding Clarke, who was asked by the Government to draw up a redress scheme, met with Health Department officials to discuss her proposals.
Sheila O'Connor, of the campaign group Patient Focus, said: "There is no money that will compensate anybody for what happened in Drogheda that is the simple fact and we have always known that but it is an acknowledgement for people.
"And to be quite honest people are content with the amount they have never looked at it from the point of view of money."
The group said it also wants a small number of women who underwent a number of other gynaecological procedures to be included.
However, the Department of Health said the proposals for the redress scheme had yet to be finalised.
In Judge Clarke's earlier report she said it was hard to understand how nearly 130 hysterectomies could have been performed by Dr Neary over nearly a quarter of a century at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Drogheda without questions being asked.
It is understood women will have to produce a medical report showing the surgery was unnecessary but this will not affect over 40 patients whose medical files have went missing.
The level of the award is believed to depend on the age of the woman, if she already had children before the procedure. Another factor to be taken into account is whether her ovaries were removed.