Western Daily Press (Saturday)

National ‘call to action’ in battle with measles

- JANE KIRBY

A“NATIONAL call to action” is needed across the country to ensure children are vaccinated against potentiall­y deadly measles, the head of the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) has said.

Professor Dame Jenny Harries, chief executive of the UKHSA, warned that measles is spreading among unvaccinat­ed communitie­s, and urged parents to check whether their children have had the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) jab.

Vaccinatio­n rates across the country have been dropping, but there are particular concerns about some regions, including parts of London and the West Midlands.

Figures released by the UKHSA show there have been 216 confirmed measles cases and 103 probable cases in the West Midlands since October 1 last year.

Four-fifths (80%) have been found in Birmingham while 10% were identified in Coventry, with the majority being in children aged under 10.

The UKHSA has declared a national incident, which it said is an internal mechanism signalling the growing public health risk and enabling it to focus work in specific areas.

Ahead of her visit to Birmingham yesterday, Dame Jenny told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that people have “forgotten what measles is like”, and that children can be unwell for a week or two with symptoms including a nasty rash, high fever and ear infections. She added that the virus is highly infectious.

There can also be serious complicati­ons, hospital admissions and death.

“The focus this morning obviously is on the West Midlands and I’m going there, but I think the real issue is we need a call to action right across the country,” she said.

“We had establishe­d measles eliminatio­n status in the UK, but in fact our vaccinatio­n rates now have dropped on average to about only 85% of children arriving at school having had the two MMR doses.

“In the West Midlands, that’s in some areas down to 81%, [and] if we go down to the Surrey Heartlands Integrated Care Board area, that’s just over 70%. So we are well under the recommende­d coverage for

MMR vaccinatio­n that the WHO (World Health Organisati­on) recommends.”

She said uptake of MMR vaccines does differ among communitie­s.

Asked which communitie­s, she said: “This is an important point, I think, for the West Midlands, for those in Muslim communitie­s, they will be not keen to take up one of the MMR vaccines that we offer which has a pork-based derivative.

“But it’s really important that they’re aware there is a non-porcine vaccine which is available to them and very effective. So it’s that sort of understand­ing and ensuring that knowledge is available to people so they can make choices.”

She said the vaccine programme in the UK is “clearly not” where the UKHSA wants it to be, adding “we want it to be 95% [coverage]”.

She added: “It’s quite common with vaccinatio­n programmes that when the risk is perceived to have gone away, then the concern to get vaccinated may drop off and so one of the reasons for flagging this today is to remind people that cases are still out there. This is a serious illness.”

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