logo
Major change to childhood immunisation schedule after concern over surge in killer infection

Major change to childhood immunisation schedule after concern over surge in killer infection

Scottish Sun07-05-2025
Plus, everything you need to know about the MMR jab - from whether it's safe to what it's made from
JABS UP Major change to childhood immunisation schedule after concern over surge in killer infection
HEALTH chiefs have unveiled "significant" changes to the childhood vaccination schedule following a sharp rise in cases of a deadly infection.
The age at which children get the MMR jab, which protects against measles, mumps and rubella has been brought forward from three years old to just 18 months.
Advertisement
1
It comes after the UK has seen a huge spike in measles cases over the last few years, while vaccine rates have plummeted.
Globally, rates of the lethal Victorian disease had doubled in the past year alone.
Two doses offer up to 99 per cent protection against measles, mumps and rubella, which can lead to deadly meningitis, hearing loss and problems during pregnancy.
Officals from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) hope the move with "improve uptake and provide earlier protection".
Advertisement
There are four other changes to the jab programme which will "optimise the overall protection of children in the UK", they added.
One of the main tweaks is the introduction of a new fourth dose of the 6-in-1 vaccine, given at 18 months.
This jab protects against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough (also known as pertussis), polio, hepatitis B and Hib - short for haemophilus influenzae type b.
Hib is a type of bacteria that can cause life-threatening infections like meningitis and sepsis.
Advertisement
The change will apply to children turning one on or after July 1, 2025, who will then be offered the extra dose when they hit 18 months.
Health officials say the update is needed because the current Hib/Men C vaccine, called Menitorix, which is offered at the one-year mark, is being discontinued due to supply issues.
Dr Philippa Kaye urges parents to get their children vaccinated as measles infections surge
Despite this, the 12-month appointment will still include the first dose of the MMR vaccine. along with booster shots for meningitis B and pneumococcal disease.
Other changes involve the second dose of the meningitis B vaccine being given earlier, at 12 weeks instead of 16. This follows a recent study showing that earlier protection could be more effective.
Advertisement
To balance this out and avoid too many jabs at one time, the first dose of the pneumococcal vaccine is being moved from 12 weeks to 16 weeks.
From January 1, 2026, children turning 18 months will be offered their second MMR jab much earlier than before - at 18 months instead of waiting until three years and four months.
However, kids who are already between 18 months and three years four months on January 1, 2026, will stay on the current schedule and get their second MMR dose at the usual time.
Changes to routine childhood immunisation schedule
From July 2025: The Hib/Men C vaccine (Menitorix) will no longer be given to children turning one.
will no longer be given to children turning one. The second meningitis B dose will be moved from 16 weeks to 12 weeks .
will be moved from . The first pneumococcal (PCV) dose will be moved from 12 weeks to 16 weeks .
will be moved from . The monovalent hepatitis B dose given at one year (for some babies) will be stopped.
From January 2026: A new fourth dose of the 6-in-1 vaccine (DTaP/IPV/Hib/HepB) will be introduced at 18 months .
of the will be introduced at . The second MMR dose will be moved from 3 years 4 months to 18 months.
Latest NHS Digital data shows that in some parts of England, up to three in ten children haven't had both MMR jabs by the time they turn five.
Advertisement
But the figure needs to be above 90 per cent to stop outbreaks, public health guidance says.
Measles mostly produces flu-like symptoms including a fever, a cough, a cold, and a blotchy rash that is usually not itchy.
But in some cases, it can travel to other parts of the body, like the lungs or brain, and cause serious illness.
Complications include pneumonia, meningitis, blindness, seizures, and death.
Advertisement
It is transmitted through direct contact with airborne droplets that spread when a person breathes, coughs, or sneezes.
It's very unlikely to be measles if you've had both MMR vaccine doses or had measles before.
The MMR vaccine is free to everyone on the NHS and is available from GP surgeries.
'Will save the lives of more very young babies'
Professor Azeem Majeed, from Imperial College London, told GP magazine Pulse: "The changes to the NHS childhood vaccination programme have important implications for general practices and parents of children in England.
Advertisement
"For general practices, the guidance requires significant adjustments to vaccination schedules, increased administrative efforts, and proactive communication to ensure compliance and maintain high uptake.
"For parents, the changes mean adapting to a new 18-month appointment, understanding the revised schedule based on their child's birth date, and ensuring timely vaccinations."
Dr Julie Yates, from UKHSA, added: "Following a review of the latest evidence, the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) recommended a number of changes to optimise the Childhood Immunisation programme and increase overall protection of children in the UK.
"With the UK close to seeing an end to Meningitis C circulating, JCVI advised that a vaccination is no longer required for infants due to the excellent population protection provided by the adolescent Meningitis ACWY programme.
Advertisement
"Other changes, such as the bringing forward of the Meningitis B vaccine are based on evidence that will save the lives of more very young babies."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Do this expert-approved four-move workout weekly to improve full-body strength, blood sugar and bone density
Do this expert-approved four-move workout weekly to improve full-body strength, blood sugar and bone density

The Independent

time28 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Do this expert-approved four-move workout weekly to improve full-body strength, blood sugar and bone density

In the fitness world, if something sounds too good to be true, it usually is. The advice below can be viewed as one of a select few exceptions. Completing just two time-efficient strength training sessions per week – taking roughly 1 per cent of the 168 hours on offer – will provide the stimulus most people need to make life-changing improvements to their health, fitness and physical capacity. This is what experienced certified strength and conditioning coach Danny Matranga stresses to clients; and he has helped hundreds of them since he started working on gym floors as an 18-year-old. In fact, he adds, less is usually more for those newer to this type of training. 'From just two sessions of resistance training a week, you will have better blood sugar, better bone density, better cognition and better motor control,' Matranga says. 'Physically, you'll have more muscle, probably less body fat, and less pain in your joints. Aesthetically, you'll probably look way better in your clothes – you'll see areas like your arms, thighs, glutes and tummy start to change. 'That's an amazing return from just a few hours per week; you are going to get the most unbelievable benefits from that first hour of exercise. [But after a point], with each additional hour, we get into what we call diminishing marginal returns.' Below, he explains why this is the case and shares a sample dumbbell-only workout you can use to build full-body strength – among a plethora of other benefits. Science says beginners shouldn't train too much 'When people look at the fitness industry, they see people in incredible shape working out six or seven days per week and think, 'Wow, that must be what I need to do,'' Matranga explains. 'But for somebody who is currently doing nothing, or very little, you're actually better off working out one to three times per week.' The reason for this, in his words, is that 'you're only going to make progress equal to the amount of work you can recover from, and a new exerciser can't recover from an advanced routine'. Strength training provides the stimulus for positive physical adaptations; more muscle, less fat, increased physical capacity, better cognition, improved heart health, the list goes on. But these changes don't happen during the workouts themselves – they happen in the time between sessions when you're recovering. Because the strength training stimulus is new to novice exercisers, any amount will act as a jolt to the system, and it doesn't take much to trigger impressive results. But when you give your body more exercise than it can handle, which for fresh exercisers is usually a fairly low threshold, you will quickly hit a point of 'diminishing marginal returns'. In layman's terms: your body will reach a point where it can no longer positively adapt to the volume of exercise you're asking of it, leading to limited benefits relative to the extra time you're putting in. Less really is more, and for newer exercisers, most of the magic lies in the first hour or two of work you do each week. Of course, over time, consistent and progressive exercise can increase your work capacity – a term defined to me by endurance swimmer Ross Edgley as 'your body's ability to perform and positively tolerate training at a given intensity or duration'. When you start to spot evidence of this progress, you may want to consider upping your weekly training volume. But work capacity takes time to develop, so for time-efficient training, two or three strength sessions per week (alongside some form of regular aerobic activity such as walking) offer optimal ROI for those in their first few years of lifting weights. How to use this advice to improve your fitness If you want to implement this advice, Matranga recommends starting with full-body workouts – sessions that recruit every major muscle group; the chest, back, shoulders, arms, legs and core – twice per week. 'When you're a novice, you can go into the gym and do a pushing exercise and a pulling exercise for your upper body, something like a squat for the front of your legs, something like a deadlift for the back of your legs, and then you can walk away after four exercises having trained every single muscle in your body,' he says. 'The average person wants the most results from the least amount of time in the gym, and I respect that – the gym isn't everybody's happy place. If time is of the utmost importance and you want the most gains from the least number of trips to the gym, total body programmes are very effective.' The gym isn't a prerequisite for this plan of action either. Strength training involves using your muscles to overcome an external load, but as long as this load is challenging enough to stimulate the desired adaptations (more on this below), the body won't mind whether it comes from resistance machines, dumbbells, barbells, kettlebells, resistance bands or even your own body weight. A sample full-body dumbbell workout All you need to complete this session is a pair of dumbbells, and you can use it twice per week as your strength training workouts – if you do, complete the dumbbell overhead press in one session and the press-up in the other to bias the shoulders and chest muscles respectively. You can also do it at the gym, in your living room or at the park – your muscles don't care where you are, just that you're giving them a good workout. The common denominator behind an effective strength-boosting, muscle-building, joint-bolstering session is something called mechanical tension. To achieve this, you need to ensure the target muscles are working hard enough during each set to achieve the stimulus needed for positive adaptations. A good way to check for this is, by your last two or three reps, your form should remain immaculate but your movements should be involuntarily slowing down due to the accumulated fatigue in the muscles. If the last couple of reps feel easy, the exercise wasn't challenging enough. This is why Matranga prescribes a goal of 12-15 repetitions, rather than giving you an exact number to gun for – stop when you can't complete another rep with perfect form, rather than hitting the breaks when you reach the listed rep target. If you don't have access to dumbbells heavy enough to feel challenging for 12-15 reps, Matranga advises completing the exercises non-stop for a set amount of time (such as 30 or 60 seconds) or continuing until you feel 'it burning in the target muscle' instead. However, a rep goal of 12-15 per set is his favourite for beginner lifters. This is because a higher target number of reps allows you to challenge yourself with lighter weights, while also practising the movement more times – lifting weights is a skill, after all, like any physical activity. 'In golf, if you wanted to learn how to swing the driver, you wouldn't go to the driving range, swing it one time as hard as you can and then leave,' Matranga explains. 'You would take a bunch of swings, and after a lot of practice, you would eventually start hitting the ball straight. 'For new lifters, I like aiming for 12 to 15 reps because you use less weight, which allows you to practise and rehearse the form while still getting close to failure. Sometimes you get a little bit of an aerobic benefit from a little more reps too, and let's be honest, most people could use a cardiovascular benefit from their exercise.' When you become more comfortable with an exercise and fine-tune your technique, you can then start increasing the weight you're lifting and lowering the target number of repetitions to increase strength, Matranga adds. 10-second takeaways Two weekly strength training workouts per week is enough to trigger impressive results in beginners, including improved strength, joint health, mobility, heart health, body composition and cognition. Beginners will enjoy maximal return on investment from fewer workouts as they need less of a stimulus to trigger positive adaptations, and they are unable to positively tolerate advanced exercise routines. Full-body workouts are the most time-efficient option as they allow you to train each major muscle group (those of the chest, back, shoulders, arms, legs and core) more frequently. An example of an efficient dumbbell-only full-body workout is the goblet squat, dumbbell Romanian deadlift, dumbbell overhead press and single-arm dumbbell bent-over row, each performed for two to three sets of 12 to 15 repetitions, with 60 seconds of rest between each set.

We In Front: Huddersfield walking group 'changing lives'
We In Front: Huddersfield walking group 'changing lives'

BBC News

time29 minutes ago

  • BBC News

We In Front: Huddersfield walking group 'changing lives'

A walking group primarily made up of people from Huddersfield's West Indian community is "changing lives", its members have by 71-year-old Errol Hamlet, the "We In Front" group walks four days a week and encourages people aged over 50 to maintain good physical and mental health. Mr. Hamlet, a finalist in the BBC Radio Leeds 2025 Make a Difference Awards, was inspired to start the group during the Covid pandemic after people felt years later, the group has more than 30 members and regularly walked within a 20-mile radius of Huddersfield. Occasionally they partner their walks with organisations such as the Huddersfield Art Gallery and the Canal and River Trust. They also have monthly day trips to other locations, including the Peak District and the North York April 2026 they are heading further afield for a walking trip in southern Spain. "Usually, Caribbean people don't walk for pleasure, they walk for purpose," said walk leader Lillalee Wright, 63. "This is walking for leisure, walking for health."She added: "I love walking with Errol because he loves to stop and just say, 'breathe it in, stop and stare'."Most walks are followed by picnics, live music and dancing, the group said. Many in the group have links to Carriacou in the Grenadines, including 74-year-old Winston Billy. Last year he suffered a stroke and was told by his doctor that the amount of walking he did may have saved his life. Many members of the group have various health issues, according to Mr Hamlet, but when they attend a hike "they smile and they just want to walk".Mr Hamlet himself has had prostate cancer and hip and knee replacements."We In Front changed my life," he said. "When I'm out here walking my worries disappear."Reflecting on his Make A Difference Award nomination, he said: "I didn't believe it! "I just felt on top of the world - I'm really doing something good, I'm making people happy." Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Marathon runner in best shape of her life diagnosed with deadly cancer
Marathon runner in best shape of her life diagnosed with deadly cancer

Daily Mail​

time29 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Marathon runner in best shape of her life diagnosed with deadly cancer

A marathon runner who felt like she was in the best shape of her life was diagnosed with a deadly cancer that has spiked among young people. Lindsay Barad, 39, from New York had just run her fourth marathon, was avoiding alcohol, and eating clean. But just a month after the race in 2021, she was hit with a devastating diagnosis of stage four appendiceal cancer and told she had hundreds of tumors inside her. 'I had never even heard of this cancer,' Lindsay told in an exclusive sit-down interview. 'I didn't know it was possible. I was really, really shocked. I had no other symptoms; I just thought this was some kind of endometriosis.' Appendiceal cancer, or appendix cancer, is now the fastest-rising cancer among under-50s, with young adults today being up to seven times more likely to develop the disease as in the 1940s. Lindsay is among the latest young adults to be diagnosed with the disease and, like many others, said she has no idea why she developed it, despite her healthy lifestyle. She also has no idea when it started. She had heavy periods, menstrual cramps and bloating for as long as she could remember, which can be symptoms of appendicceal cancer, but had always played them down as normal. Doctors had dismissed them too, saying they were 'just something women go through' and putting her on birth control and over-the-counter painkillers to reduce her symptoms. But in late 2021, after she changed gynecologist, Lindsay was recommended for an ultrasound on the pretence of getting an IUD, or small T-shaped device that is inserted into the uterus to prevent pregnancy. The scan revealed a grapefruit-sized cyst on her right ovary, despite the fact that ovaries are only about three to five centimeters long. She was rushed into surgery, but during the procedure doctors noted a strange mucus in her abdominal cavity and that her appendix was swollen. They removed her appendix and sent it for testing, along with her cyst, right ovary and right fallopian tube. A few weeks later, in December 2021, she was called back into her doctor's office to be given the diagnosis. Lindsay said: 'It's hard to figure out when was that quote-unquote normal [menstrual cramps] versus when did I have appendix cancer, and that was what was making the symptoms. 'What was a red flag symptom was close to my diagnosis I had to urinate a lot, and I would notice every time I would drink something I would have to use the bathroom. I always felt the need to pee. 'And it turned out that was because I had a huge ovarian cyst and it was taking up space where my bladder is and that was me needing to urinate.' Appendiceal cancer has no clear symptoms, especially in its early stages, meaning doctors often struggle to diagnose the disease. It is rare, with about 3,000 cases every year, and normally diagnosed in people around 50 and 55 years old. But as cases have risen among younger adults, researchers have suggested that shifts in the microbiome caused by the western diet could be raising the risk of developing the cancer. Lindsay was diagnosed with low-grade appendiceal mucinous neoplasm (LAMN), a rare and slow-growing form where cells in the appendix overproduce mucin - a jelly-like substance - that can flood the abdominal cavity and push other cells into it. This disruption in the body's internal cavity can cause a large cyst to develop on an ovary, like in Lindsay's case, or on another organ of the body. It isn't clear how often this form of the disease affects patients, but some studies on only a small number of patients have suggested it is around 40 per cent of all cases. To treat her cancer, Lindsay was brought in for a major 12-hour surgery in March 2022 to try to clear the disease from her body. For the procedure, surgeons initially made an incision from her chest to her pelvis and opened up her body, before trying to remove as much of mucin as possible that was coating each organ. They removed part of her liver, omentum - the thin tissue surrounding the stomach - and part of her diaphragm during the surgery because these were covered in mucin. Doctors also said they might have to remove her uterus, leaving Lindsay unable to start a family, but managed to save the organ. Then, doctors pumped her abdominal cavity full of chemotherapy drugs heated to 106F, sewed her up and rotated her for about 90 minutes. She was rotated to spread the chemotherapy drugs in her abdomen to treat any remaining cancer cells. The drugs were then extracted, and Lindsay said she went through months of a 'miserable' recovery where she was so unwell she was barely able to leave the apartment. But the surgery was a success, and the cancer has not been detected in Lindsay since. She now returns every year to the hospital to check for recurrence. Survival rates for appendix cancer vary widely depending on the type and how advanced the cancer is, with between 67 and 97 per cent of patients living for longer than five years after their diagnosis. For LAMN, about 64 per cent of patients survive for longer than five years according to studies. Amid her recovery, Lindsay said she is now trying to live an intentional life and is thankful for the people around her and aiming to raise awareness about the disease. Appendix cancer is slow-growing but Lindsay says she will never be considered 'cured,' just 'in remission' because of the risk more cancerous cells could appear. She said: 'It's so slow moving, it could be slowly growing over the next couple of years, so it's uncertain. 'But every year now I get scans and blood work done and I feel like I am just in really good hands with all of this.' She lives in her apartment with her dog Charlie, a rescued Maltese poodle mix, and keeps active with long hikes. She also had her eggs frozen at age 35 in case she wanted to start a family but now says she doesn't think she wants to put her body through the trial of pregnancy. Lindsay is thankful that her cancer was slow growing but fears the outcome if it had not been detected earlier.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store