logo
The reasons parents are more reluctant to vaccinate their children

The reasons parents are more reluctant to vaccinate their children

Independenta day ago
UK childhood vaccination rates have declined over the past decade, with none of the routine jabs meeting the 95 per cent coverage target since 2021, putting children at risk of preventable diseases.
A new report by the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health identifies "stubborn barriers" to vaccination beyond just hesitancy, including difficulties booking appointments, inconvenient clinic locations, and lack of continuity in NHS care.
The study also highlights issues such as a lack of reminders from GP surgeries, absence of digital records, and fear of judgment among parents.
Disparities in vaccine uptake are noted among ethnic minority groups, socio-economically disadvantaged families, and migrant communities due to language barriers and digital exclusion.
Recommendations include better training for health professionals, increased pro-vaccine messaging on social media, mandatory vaccination education in schools, and improving access through flexible booking and wider clinic availability.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Breast cancer patients ‘denied life-extending drugs because of unfair system'
Breast cancer patients ‘denied life-extending drugs because of unfair system'

Rhyl Journal

time3 hours ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Breast cancer patients ‘denied life-extending drugs because of unfair system'

Breast Cancer Now has demanded 'immediate action' from Health Secretary Wes Streeting, urging him to scrap spending restraints. It is also calling for the NHS spending watchdog the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) to lower the bar for what it classes as a very severe health condition. Nice's severity modifier, introduced in 2022, gives treatment for more severe illnesses more weight, meaning the health benefits of certain drugs are valued more highly and more likely to be recommended for NHS use. According to Nice, the process raises the threshold for what it considers to be a cost-effective treatment, meaning it can give more expensive drugs the green light. However, a new report from Breast Cancer Now claims the system means women with incurable breast cancer with months to live may be told their condition does not qualify for the most severe rating. The call comes after it emerged that the life-extending drug Enhertu will not be made available for women with incurable breast cancer on the NHS in England and Wales. In November, Nice said talks with manufacturers AstraZeneca and Daiichi Sankyo over the price of the medication had broken down for the third time with no agreement. Claire Rowney, chief executive at Breast Cancer Now, said: 'The terrifying reality is that unless urgent action is taken thousands of women in the UK with incurable secondary breast cancer could be denied access to vital life-extending treatments because of an unfair system. 'We're talking about patients missing out on access to cutting-edge, effective treatments that could give them more time to be there for special moments such as birthdays or seeing their children or grandchildren start school. 'Treatments, such as Enhertu, that patients in other countries, including Scotland, can access, giving them the chance to live longer. 'Women with secondary breast cancer tell us they feel their lives are being deprioritised by the changes to the system. 'We will not stand by and witness more drugs being rejected or not taken forward, when the devastating cost is thousands more people with secondary breast cancer across England, Wales and Northern Ireland having their lives cut short.' Paula Van Santen, 50, was diagnosed with secondary breast cancer in July 2022, two months after her diagnosis of primary breast cancer. The mother-of-three, from Banbury in Oxfordshire, said: 'Secondary breast cancer has changed the lives of both myself and my family beyond belief. Coming to terms with my diagnosis is the hardest part because I've had to grieve for the life I had, but also the life that I'm not going to have. 'If a new drug can give me another six months, if it gives me another year, it's worth it. 'It could allow me to see my daughter get to 21, see my children get married or meet grandchildren. Just to have a picture with a grandchild so they would know that I existed would be so precious. That's what this could give.' Ms Rowney called for 'change' and said Mr Streeting should scrap 'opportunity-cost neutral' restraints. Opportunity cost neutrality in the Nice severity modifier aims to ensure the new system does not require more or less overall NHS funding than the old one. According to the Breast Cancer Now report, this is 'at the root of the issues with the modifier'. It added: 'It pits end-of-life cancer treatments against other severe conditions like cystic fibrosis in a way that's reductive and unfair to patients. And, ultimately, it creates barriers to the approval of drugs for advanced cancers.' Ms Rowney said: 'The system for deciding whether drugs are approved for use on the NHS must change now. 'We're calling for immediate action from Wes Streeting, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, to urgently scrap 'opportunity-cost neutral' restraints and for Nice to lower the bar for what it defines as 'a severe condition'. And we stand ready to work with them.' Dr Samantha Roberts, chief executive of Nice, welcomed the report from Breast Cancer Now, saying: 'The independent analysis we commissioned recently showed the new severity weighting is working as intended and expected. 'It is able to be applied more widely – for example to treatments for cystic fibrosis, hepatitis D and Duchenne muscular dystrophy – and has contributed to an increase in positive decisions for cancer medicines and non-cancer medicines. 'And other breast cancer treatments have been recommended since we introduced the severity modifier – including for advanced breast cancer. 'We remain deeply disappointed that we were unable to recommend Enhertu for HER2-low advanced breast cancer. We know this was devastating to all those hoping for a different answer. 'It remains the only breast cancer treatment we have been unable to recommend in seven years.' A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said the upcoming 10-year health plan will 'transform the NHS and improve care for those facing cancer'. 'This includes rolling out DIY screening kits for cervical cancer, more radiotherapy machines in every region and opening more Community Diagnostic Centres closer to where people live,' they added. 'We know how disappointing it is to many families that the manufacturers of Enhertu are unwilling to sell this life-extending treatment to the NHS at a fair and reasonable price. Our door remains open to supporting the introduction of medicines at a cost-effective price.'

Record number of NHS operations given in private hospitals
Record number of NHS operations given in private hospitals

North Wales Chronicle

time3 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Record number of NHS operations given in private hospitals

Data from the Independent Healthcare Providers Network (IHPN) show that private hospitals delivered the equivalent of 2,859 NHS procedures every working day in April – an increase of over 60% compared to the same month in 2019. It said that almost one in five NHS operations in England are carried out in private hospitals and clinics. Overall, the independent sector is delivering 10% of all NHS planned care, up from 8% before the Covid-19 pandemic, the IHPN said. The IHPN also said that the number of referrals it had received has also reached a record high – with private providers receiving 7,162 referrals each working day in April. Official NHS data show that the waiting list for routine hospital treatment in England has fallen to its lowest level for two years. An estimated 7.39 million treatments were waiting to be carried out at the end of April, relating to 6.23 million patients – down from 7.42 million treatments and 6.25 million patients at the end of March. The Government has set out plans to send more patients for treatment in private hospitals to slash waiting lists. David Hare, chief executive of the IHPN, said: 'This latest data shows the independent sector's increasingly pivotal role in delivering frontline NHS care – delivering record levels of NHS care which will be instrumental in helping the Government to meet their key milestone to ensure 92% of patients are treated within 18 weeks by the end of this Parliament. 'While this is a clear sign of welcome progress in tackling NHS waiting lists, the sector is committed to building on this already impressive achievement and will be working with the Government to ensure the principles contained in the recent NHS and Independent Sector Partnership Agreement are fully embedded – enabling patients to have a greater choice over their care so they can get the treatment they need, when they need it.'

Breast cancer patients ‘denied life-extending drugs because of unfair system'
Breast cancer patients ‘denied life-extending drugs because of unfair system'

North Wales Chronicle

time3 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Breast cancer patients ‘denied life-extending drugs because of unfair system'

Breast Cancer Now has demanded 'immediate action' from Health Secretary Wes Streeting, urging him to scrap spending restraints. It is also calling for the NHS spending watchdog the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) to lower the bar for what it classes as a very severe health condition. Nice's severity modifier, introduced in 2022, gives treatment for more severe illnesses more weight, meaning the health benefits of certain drugs are valued more highly and more likely to be recommended for NHS use. According to Nice, the process raises the threshold for what it considers to be a cost-effective treatment, meaning it can give more expensive drugs the green light. However, a new report from Breast Cancer Now claims the system means women with incurable breast cancer with months to live may be told their condition does not qualify for the most severe rating. The call comes after it emerged that the life-extending drug Enhertu will not be made available for women with incurable breast cancer on the NHS in England and Wales. In November, Nice said talks with manufacturers AstraZeneca and Daiichi Sankyo over the price of the medication had broken down for the third time with no agreement. Claire Rowney, chief executive at Breast Cancer Now, said: 'The terrifying reality is that unless urgent action is taken thousands of women in the UK with incurable secondary breast cancer could be denied access to vital life-extending treatments because of an unfair system. 'We're talking about patients missing out on access to cutting-edge, effective treatments that could give them more time to be there for special moments such as birthdays or seeing their children or grandchildren start school. 'Treatments, such as Enhertu, that patients in other countries, including Scotland, can access, giving them the chance to live longer. 'Women with secondary breast cancer tell us they feel their lives are being deprioritised by the changes to the system. 'We will not stand by and witness more drugs being rejected or not taken forward, when the devastating cost is thousands more people with secondary breast cancer across England, Wales and Northern Ireland having their lives cut short.' Paula Van Santen, 50, was diagnosed with secondary breast cancer in July 2022, two months after her diagnosis of primary breast cancer. The mother-of-three, from Banbury in Oxfordshire, said: 'Secondary breast cancer has changed the lives of both myself and my family beyond belief. Coming to terms with my diagnosis is the hardest part because I've had to grieve for the life I had, but also the life that I'm not going to have. 'If a new drug can give me another six months, if it gives me another year, it's worth it. 'It could allow me to see my daughter get to 21, see my children get married or meet grandchildren. Just to have a picture with a grandchild so they would know that I existed would be so precious. That's what this could give.' Ms Rowney called for 'change' and said Mr Streeting should scrap 'opportunity-cost neutral' restraints. Opportunity cost neutrality in the Nice severity modifier aims to ensure the new system does not require more or less overall NHS funding than the old one. According to the Breast Cancer Now report, this is 'at the root of the issues with the modifier'. It added: 'It pits end-of-life cancer treatments against other severe conditions like cystic fibrosis in a way that's reductive and unfair to patients. And, ultimately, it creates barriers to the approval of drugs for advanced cancers.' Ms Rowney said: 'The system for deciding whether drugs are approved for use on the NHS must change now. 'We're calling for immediate action from Wes Streeting, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, to urgently scrap 'opportunity-cost neutral' restraints and for Nice to lower the bar for what it defines as 'a severe condition'. And we stand ready to work with them.' Dr Samantha Roberts, chief executive of Nice, welcomed the report from Breast Cancer Now, saying: 'The independent analysis we commissioned recently showed the new severity weighting is working as intended and expected. 'It is able to be applied more widely – for example to treatments for cystic fibrosis, hepatitis D and Duchenne muscular dystrophy – and has contributed to an increase in positive decisions for cancer medicines and non-cancer medicines. 'And other breast cancer treatments have been recommended since we introduced the severity modifier – including for advanced breast cancer. 'We remain deeply disappointed that we were unable to recommend Enhertu for HER2-low advanced breast cancer. We know this was devastating to all those hoping for a different answer. 'It remains the only breast cancer treatment we have been unable to recommend in seven years.' A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said the upcoming 10-year health plan will 'transform the NHS and improve care for those facing cancer'. 'This includes rolling out DIY screening kits for cervical cancer, more radiotherapy machines in every region and opening more Community Diagnostic Centres closer to where people live,' they added. 'We know how disappointing it is to many families that the manufacturers of Enhertu are unwilling to sell this life-extending treatment to the NHS at a fair and reasonable price. Our door remains open to supporting the introduction of medicines at a cost-effective price.'

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