The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

MMR plea to Fife parents after rise in mumps is recorded in kingdom.

NHS Fife advising people to have both doses of the MMR vaccine

- CRAIG SMITH csmith@thecourier.co.uk

Parents have been urged to ensure their children are vaccinated after a sharp rise in mumps cases in Fife.

Shock new figures from NHS Fife have revealed instances of the potentiall­y serious viral infection more than trebled in 2019, from 12 in 2018 to 43 last year.

Mumps usually passes without causing serious damage to a sufferer’s health but it can lead to fertility problems and even viral meningitis if the virus moves into the brain.

Health chiefs in the region are understood to be monitoring the situation closely, although people are being advised to have both doses of the MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) vaccine to prevent any spread.

NHS Fife director of public health Dona Milne said: “The most effective way to protect against mumps is through MMR vaccinatio­n.”

News of the rise in cases comes nine months after an apparent outbreak of mumps at St Andrews University, which was quickly brought under control.

On that occasion, NHS Fife said it was working closely with the university to promote vaccinatio­n.

It added the number of cases at the university was “very small” and showed a pattern similar to previous years.

The university also tells prospectiv­e students to get the MMR vaccine before arriving as a matter of course.

Uptake of the vaccine was adversely affected by a now discredite­d report by Andrew Wakefield, published in The Lancet in 1998, linking the vaccine to autism or bowel disease.

Health Protection Scotland said NHS boards continue to experience clusters of mumps mainly in adolescent­s and young adults, with 853 cases reported in the first quarter of 2020.

That is already in excess of the 784 laboratory-confirmed cases reported in the whole of 2019.

“Cases in March reflect a reduction in cases in comparison to the first two months of 2020,” it added.

“This trend may be expected to continue to decline as a result of social distancing measures due to Covid-19, which may interrupt the transmissi­on of mumps.

“It may also reflect reduction in diagnoses due to reduced attendance at primary care services.”

NHS Tayside has confirmed the pattern of mumps cases there is not giving any cause for concern, as numbers have fallen from 34 in 2017 and 28 in 2018 to just 26 last year.

“The most effective way to protect against mumps is through MMR vaccinatio­n. DONA MILNE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom