Long queues at extra MMR jab clinics

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 06 April 2013 | 21.24

6 April 2013 Last updated at 10:08 ET
A queue

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Queues began at this Swansea clinic before it opened, as Hywel Griffith reports

Long queues have formed as four south Wales hospitals offer free MMR jabs aimed at curbing a measles epidemic.

People began waiting at one, Morriston Hospital in Swansea, an hour before the doors opened at 10:00 BST on Saturday.

By early afternoon the local health board said about 800 vaccinations had been administered.

The outbreak has affected nearly 600 people so far in south, mid and west Wales, and sessions are also being held in Neath Port Talbot and Bridgend.

Continue reading the main story

Analysis

Hywel Griffith BBC Wales correspondent


The queues at Morriston Hospital started a full hour before the clinics were due to begin, with every parent anxious to make sure their child did not miss out.

Most of those having a jab are toddlers but a few are in their early teens.

Many of the parents I have spoken to say they decided not to vaccinate earlier because of research - since discredited - which claimed there was a link between the MMR jab and autism.

But this outbreak has clearly changed attitudes across Swansea.

Those same parents are now prepared to queue for hours to secure an MMR vaccine for their child.

The demand has exceeded doctors' expectations, creating its own problem, and the local health board has had to call on emergency supplies of MMR.

Although aimed primarily at children, the vaccinations are available for anyone born after 1970 who has not had measles or been vaccinated.

Public health officials say confirmed measles cases have risen to 588 in the south Wales outbreak, which is centred on Swansea.

The latest figure shows 47 new cases of the disease since Wednesday, although this is less than half the increase of the previous week.

Before the introduction of the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccination in 1988, about half a million children caught measles and about 100 died from it each year in the UK.

But concerns over the jab's safety were raised a decade later when surgeon Andrew Wakefield published a since discredited paper in The Lancet suggesting MMR was linked with an increased risk of autism.

Media coverage

That paper, and subsequent media coverage, led to immunisation rates plummeting. From a high of 92% across the UK in 1995-6, it fell to an average of 80% in 2003-4.

For children in England reaching their second birthday it rose to 91.2% in 2011-12, but that is still below the World Health Organization target of at least 95%.

Wales figures for October to December 2012 show 94% uptake of the first dose of vaccine, with local authority uptake ranging from 87% to 97%. Uptake of the second dose by five years of age increased to 90%, from 89% in the previous quarter.

Public Health Wales has attributed the slowdown in the spread of the disease to a rise in the number of people being inoculated. But it has warned that 3,800 children have still not had both doses of the MMR vaccine.

It said just 600 in the Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board area received the jab in the past week.

That figure does not include children who are vaccinated as normal at 13 months and three years four months.

Continue reading the main story

Measles Q&A

  • How safe is it to take children to mainland Europe who have had two doses of the MMR vaccine?

It gives 99% protection against the measles virus.

  • What if they have had only one dose of MMR?

One dose is better than none, but two doses is better than one. If you are concerned about travelling to an outbreak area you can bring forward the second MMR dose. Speak to your GP about it.

  • What if my children are not vaccinated at all?

The advice is to go to your GP and arrange for them to be immunised as soon as possible before you travel. Measles is a dangerous viral illness that can be fatal.

BBC Health - Measles

Public health officials are urging parents of unvaccinated children to attend the sessions at Morriston and Singleton hospitals in Swansea, Neath Port Talbot Hospital and the Princess of Wales Hospital in Bridgend.

The drop-in MMR vaccination clinics are being held until 16:00 BST on Saturday.

Officials have said it is "just a matter of time" before a child is left with serious and permanent complications, such as eye disorders, deafness or brain damage, or even dies.

Typical symptoms of measles include fever, cough, conjunctivitis and a rash. Complications are quite common even in healthy people and about 20% of reported measles cases experience one or more complication.

These can include ear infections, vomiting and diarrhoea, pneumonia, meningitis and serious eye disorders.

Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board said no appointments were necessary at its drop-in vaccination clinics and while they were targeting children and adolescents who had not had their scheduled MMR jabs, no-one would be turned away, including adults.

Some GP surgeries have also responded to the epidemic by offering extra clinics for the MMR vaccine.

Dr Marion Lyons, director of health protection for Public Health Wales, said: "I'm hopeful that through our collective efforts and with responsible parents getting their children vaccinated we can minimise the risks to children from this dreadful disease."

Although the epidemic is based on Swansea, cases continue to be reported across Wales.

The majority are in Abertawe Bro Morgannwg, which as well as Swansea also includes Neath, Port Talbot and Bridgend; there are also cases in Powys and the Hywel Dda Health Board area, which covers Carmarthenshire, Ceredigion and Pembrokeshire.

Meanwhile, the number of confirmed cases of measles across north-east England has reached 200 since September 2012.

The Health Protection Agency (HPA) has already declared the outbreak one of the worst in recent years.

There have been 200 confirmed and 176 suspected cases in north-east England, compared to just 18 confirmed in 2011.


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