Scottish Daily Mail

Warning to parents as seventh child dies of Strep A

- By Shaun Wooller Health Editor

A SEVENTH child has died from the winter bug Strep A, leading the Government to urge parents to be extra-vigilant if their children fall ill.

A 12-year-old boy attending a school in London was the latest victim.

Cabinet minister Nadhim Zahawi yesterday said that though most cases of Strep A were mild, parents should be mindful of the symptoms.

‘It is really important to be vigilant because in the very rare circumstan­ce that it becomes serious then it needs urgent treatment,’ the Tory party chairman told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge on Sunday.

‘It is highly infectious, which is why parents should look out for symptoms – so fever, headache, skin rash.’

In Scotland, public health officials have recorded more than 430 milder cases in the past two weeks, with eight patients severely affected. The latest victim is reported to have been a Year 8 pupil at fee-paying Colfe’s School in Lewisham, south-east London. He is the first secondary school pupil to die during the current outbreak.

Meanwhile, four-year-old Camila Rose Burns, from Bolton, who has been fighting for her life on a ventilator after contractin­g Strep A, remains in Alder Hey Children’s Hospital in Liverpool.

Last night her father Dean Burns said: ‘She is still in intensive care but she is showing signs of improvemen­t. We just keep praying she recovers. Her body went into shock so her limbs have been seriously damaged. It’s heartbreak­ing.’

Group A Strep bacteria usually cause only relatively minor illnesses, such as the skin infection impetigo, scarlet fever and a sore throat.

But in rare cases they can trigger a life-threatenin­g illness called invasive Group A Streptococ­cal disease.

Four-year-old Muhammad Ibrahim Ali, of High Wycombe, Buckingham­shire, died last month after contractin­g Strep A and then suffering a cardiac arrest.

Another of the children who have died was a six-year-old, believed to be a girl, who attended Ashford Church of England Primary School in Surrey.

Thousands of parents are considerin­g pulling their children out of school as the illness sweeps through classrooms.

Hugh Pennington, emeritus professor of bacteriolo­gy at the University of Aberdeen, said he expects the outbreak to last for several weeks.

He added: ‘This outbreak appears to be caused by the bug having a rebound after lockdown.

‘It has been held at bay by social distancing and hand-washing and now it is springing back as children get together again.’

 ?? ?? Heartbreak­ing: Camila Rose Burns, pictured with her father Dean, has been critically ill
Heartbreak­ing: Camila Rose Burns, pictured with her father Dean, has been critically ill
 ?? ?? Fighting for her life: Camila Rose, four, in hospital
Fighting for her life: Camila Rose, four, in hospital

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