The Chronicle

Alarm over plunge in MMR jab rates

- By BEN O’CONNELL Local democracy reporter ec.news@reachplc.com

NORTHUMBER­LAND missed the target for both doses of MMR vaccinatio­ns last year, new figures reveal.

However, the county’s rate of 89.2% was comfortabl­y above the England average of 86.4%.

Across the country, just two local authoritie­s managed to hit the 95% target – County Durham and Cumbria.

Currently, the European

Region of the

World Health Organisati­on

(WHO) recommends that on a national basis at least

95% of children aged five are immunised against measles, mumps and rubella (MMR).

The routine childhood immunisati­on programme for the UK includes MMR as well as a number of others set out by Public Health England (PHE) in what is known as the Green Book. There is an expectatio­n that UK coverage for all those routine childhood immunisati­ons also meets the 95% mark.

NHS Digital released the childhood vaccinatio­n statistics for England in 2018-19, which showed that coverage declined in all routine vaccinatio­ns.

The figures include 13 measures covering seven immunisati­ons plus Coun Ian Hudspeth

OLD COMRADES

second doses or boosters at either 12 months, 24 months or five years. These relate to a number of diseases, such as polio, diphtheria, meningitis, whooping cough as well as measles, mumps and rubella.

Of the 13 measures recorded, Northumber­land missed the 95% target in six of them, although for four of them, including the first dose of MMR by age two, the county had a figure of above 94%. Northumber­land’s rates across all 13 were also above the English average. Where Northumber­land missed the 95% mark, fewer than 20 local authoritie­s met the target and in some cases, there were only a handful of councils that managed it. In most of these, County Durham had the highest rates in England, while North Tyneside, South Tyneside and Sunderland also performed well, with Northumber­land below the regional average for all but four of the measures.

Despite the missed targets, Northumber­land’s coverage rates improved last year in five of the vaccinatio­n measures compared to 2017-18, four of which were measured at age one, which suggests an improvemen­t which could continue as these children grow older. Reacting to the overall picture, Coun Ian Hudspeth, chairman of the

This alarming fall in childhood vaccinatio­n rates should serve as a wake-up call to parents

Local Government Associatio­n’s community wellbeing board, said: “This alarming fall in childhood vaccinatio­n rates should serve as a wake-up call to parents and authoritie­s about the need to ensure our children are property protected and immunised against disease.

“Coverage rates for the past year are the lowest for a decade and it is the responsibi­lity of those who look after our next generation that their health is safeguarde­d to prevent and protect against any future outbreak.

“Councils, which are responsibl­e for public health, are calling on all parents and guardians to visit their local GP, clinic or health centre to make sure their children have all their vaccinatio­ns as soon as possible, in order to reverse this worrying trend.

“We are committed to improving uptake rates and implementi­ng the new vaccinatio­n strategy.”

 ??  ?? The number of five-year-olds receiving the full MMR vaccine is falling nationwide
The number of five-year-olds receiving the full MMR vaccine is falling nationwide

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom