The government has launched a campaign to raise MMR vaccination rates in England amid growing concerns about a measles epidemic.
The Department of Health has asked primary care trusts (PCTs) to offer the jab to all children up to age of 18 not already fully protected.
Extra vaccine supplies and funding are being made available.
An epidemic of measles - which can be fatal - could potentially affect up to 100,000 young people in England alone.
The MMR vaccine protects against measles, mumps and rubella.
Experts say it is perfectly safe, but vaccination rates dipped following controversy about its safety.
A study which raised the possibility that MMR was linked to autism has since been dismissed by the vast majority of research, but levels of public confidence in the jab have still not fully recovered.
In a letter to all PCTs, the Chief Medical Officer Sir Liam Donaldson asks health bosses to urge parents to get their children immunised.
An average PCT will receive £30,000 to help fund the catch-up campaign.
In London, PCTs will receive £60,000, reflecting the higher numbers of children who have yet to be vaccinated.
Rising cases
The number of cases of measles in England is rising following a decade of relatively low vaccine uptake.
In 2006 and 2007 there were 1,726 confirmed cases in England and Wales - more than the previous 10 years put together.
From 1996 to 2005 there was a total of 1,621 confirmed cases.
It is estimated that around three million children aged 18 months to 18 years have missed either their first or second MMR vaccination.
Scientific advice from both the Department of Health and the Health Protection Agency suggests vaccination levels need to be increased as a matter of urgency.
The previous success of the MMR vaccination programme reduced the number of measles cases to very low levels for a number of years.
Between 1992 and 2006 there were no deaths from acute measles in England. However there was one death in 2006 and another in 2008.
Professor David Salisbury, director of immunisation at the Department of Health, warned that it was vital that MMR vaccination rates were increased.
Target rate
Around 95% of the population need to be vaccinated to protect against widespread outbreaks of measles.
The current vaccination rate across England and Wales is around 10 percentage points lower.
In Scotland and Northern Ireland, uptake of the first dose of MMR is higher, at approximately 91%.
Professor Salisbury said measles was among the most easily spread of viruses.
He said: "Measles is serious and in some cases it can be fatal. Delaying immunisation puts children at risk.
"If we continue to accumulate unvaccinated children measles will spread among them - at some point there will be a measles epidemic."
He stressed: "The evidence on MMR is absolutely clear - there is no link between the vaccine and autism."
Dr Patricia Hamilton, president of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, said: "We cannot stress too strongly that all children and young people should have the MMR vaccine.
"Overwhelming scientific evidence shows that it is safe."
The Department of Health says around 10% of measles cases require hospital admission and one in 5,000 are fatal.
Wales has no plans for a similar catch-up campaign.
UK Lockdown point of view
Vaccinations are a method of covert population control many documented cases exist
where populations in poor countries are used for testing, experimentation etc. vaccination programs are usually used as a smokescreen to acheive this goal, the new world order via the EU are now operating a very similar policy in our country as a means of mass population control, all of the cases of autism among other vaccine related problems are due to agents like Thimerosal being used as a preservative (a known poisonous Mercury compound), take vaccine's at your own risk if you wish; for those who are aware of the NWO agenda vaccine's are not for the benefit of the population they are to control the population.
No comments:
Post a Comment