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Monday, 17 December, 2001, 11:29 GMT
Meningitis
revaccination begins

The first vaccinations followed three deaths in 1999
Thousands
of south Wales school children are being vaccinated for the second time after
it emerged that an initial vaccination programme failed to protect them from
the disease.
The second round of inoculation has started
at Porth County Community School in the Rhondda, after two children at the
school contracted the disease after having the vaccination two years ago.
It is thought the vaccine used at schools
across Rhondda Cynon Taff in 1999 was stored at too low a temperature,
rendering it less effective.
The initial vaccination programme was
prompted by a severe outbreak in south Wales, which led to three deaths and
the declaration of a public health emergency.
On Monday, the first of 25,000 pupils
received a second jab against meningitis C - a strain of the disease which
causes an inflammation of the brain lining and can be fatal within hours.
The jabs - offered to those aged between
seven and 18 - are due to be completed by mid February.
But some parents have criticised that
staggered approach to the programme.
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The vaccine may not have been stored properly
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But they have been urged not to worry
during the wait for the booster, as the initial vaccination offered some
resistance to the disease.
The need for a second round of vaccinations
is a blow to Bro Taf health officials, who have stressed the programme is a
"precautionary" move."
A spokesman for the authority said the
measure was a mark of its vigilance, and the Welsh Assembly said it was
"not unusual" for children who have been vaccinated to contract the
disease.
A spokesman for Bro Taf said: "Cost
doesn't come into it - it's something that has to be done.
"It might not be the vaccine. There's
very many factors behind why the number of antibodies might not be so
high."
While there is an annual increase in the
number of reported meningitis cases each winter but, at the time of the three
deaths, cases of meningococcal meningitis leapt from 277 the previous year to
464.
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Two pupils were diagnosed with the disease
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A spokesman for the Welsh Assembly
administration said it was "not unusual" for a few children who had
been vaccinated to contract the disease.
He maintained that the re-vaccination was
proof of the authority's vigilance.
Health officials added that approximately
95% of children nationally who are immunised will develop antibodies in their
blood against meningitis C.
But children in the Rhondda Cynon Taff area
are thought to have lower levels of resistance. A statement by the health
authority read: "All children in that area who to date have received
only one dose of the MCC vaccine will be offered a second booster dose of the
vaccine.
Bro Taf said it is working closely with the
UK National Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation, the Public
Health Laboratory Service and the National Assembly for Wales.
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See also:

16 Jan
01 | Wales
Pupils treated for meningitis
01 Nov
00 | Health
Key to meningitis attack uncovered
31 Jan
00 | Health
The meningitis files
15 Sep
00 | Health
'Natural' meningitis drug cuts deaths
03 Jan
01 | Health
Brain disease 'wiped out'
09 Mar 99 | Medical
notes
Meningitis: The argument for mass
vaccinations
Internet links:

NHS Wales
Meningitis
Research Foundation
Bro
Taf Health Authority
National
Meningitis Trust
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