MMR vaccine - young adults targeted as measles outbreak continues in West Midlands
Hundreds of thousands of people in the West Midlands who did not get their measles, mumps and rubella jab as children are being invited to take part in a catch-up campaign.
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It comes amid a rising number of measles cases, with our region at the heart of the outbreak.
The NHS is writing to 900,000 19 to 25-year-olds in the West Midlands, London and Greater Manchester inviting them to book an appointment.
These young adults would have been eligible for a jab when the vaccination rates began to fall in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
Coverage of the MMR started to decline following a 1998 report by Andrew Wakefield which falsely linked the jab with autism, according to a UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) 2023 measles briefing document.
Even though the claim was discredited, and Wakefield struck off the medical register, the vaccination programme took years to recover.
Now MMR vaccine coverage is the lowest it has been for more than a decade, with just 85 per cent of youngsters having both doses of the jab before they start school aged five.
Amid a current rise in cases across England, which started with a major outbreak in the West Midlands, health officials launched a catch-up campaign initially targeting six to 11-year-olds and then 11 to 16-year-olds.
The emphasis is now being moved to 19 to 25-year-olds.
People can get their jab at their GP surgery, while some areas are also running pop-up vaccination clinics in libraries, university campuses and sports clubs.
Steve Russell, NHS England's director of vaccinations and screening, said: "Measles is one of the most infectious diseases in the world and can cause serious harm to adults and children of all ages.
"But the NHS MMR vaccine gives life-long protection against becoming seriously unwell, so with cases of measles on the rise, it is not worth the risk of going without this vital protection.
"Measles, mumps and rubella are preventable, but catching them is easy when people are unvaccinated, so I urge people to come forward and get the MMR vaccine sooner, rather than later."
Dr Gayatri Amirthalingam, consultant medical epidemiologist for immunisation at UKHSA, said: "Anyone who is not vaccinated against measles can catch it.
"Being unvaccinated also means you risk spreading the disease to others, including those at greatest risk of becoming seriously ill – like infants, who aren't able to receive their MMR vaccine until their first birthday, pregnant women and those with a weakened immune system.
"The MMR jab also protects against complications from mumps in young adults. I strongly urge anyone who's not vaccinated to protect both themselves and those more vulnerable around them."
There have been 733 cases of measles in England since October last year.
The current outbreak was initially in Birmingham and the West Midlands, but cases have now also been identified in the North West, London, East Midlands and Yorkshire and the Humber.