
Pupils from poorest areas less likely to get anti-cancer jab
Doctors say they are concerned about a drop in the number of young people having a vaccine which protects against an infection that can develop into cervical cancer.The HPV vaccine, which is offered to school pupils aged 12 and 13, helps stop the spread of Human papillomaviruses.The vaccine programme, which started in 2008, has been hugely successful, with no cervical cancer cases detected in women who have been fully vaccinated.However, Public Health Scotland said it was worried that uptake in Scotland's most deprived communities was 20% lower than in the most affluent areas.
HPV is the name given to a large group of viruses which can be caught through sexual contact with another person who already has it.Doctors say most HPV infections go away by themselves but sometimes infections can lead to a variety of serious problems.In 2008, Scotland's HPV vaccination programme started offering immunisation to girls in their first year of secondary school.Since then, no cervical cancer cases have been detected in women who have been fully vaccinated and, in 2019, the programme was extended to boys.They can develop cancer of the anus, penis, mouth and throat as a result of the infection and can also spread the infection to females.Dr Claire Cameron, a consultant in health protection at PHS, said vaccine uptake in Scotland has been declining gradually over the past decade and "inequalities are increasing" since the Covid pandemic."That's really concerning because this virus can affect everybody and we want everybody to be vaccinated so they can be protected," she said.
The latest available data from PHS shows the average HPV vaccination coverage among S1 pupils last year was 71.5%, with girls more likely than boys to be vaccinated.In the least deprived areas the vaccine rate at S1 rose to 82.1%.But in the most deprived communities that figure slumped to just 59.9%.Dr Cameron said there were a number of reasons why uptake was lower in some communities."We think it's maybe something to do with vaccine confidence isn't as high as it has been," she said. "Maybe people's engagement with healthcare has changed, but also we offer this vaccine in schools and we know that there has been a change in how young people engage with education and there's challenges there."
Last year researchers from Edinburgh University's Bioquarter set up workshops in local schools to teach pupils about the benefits of immunisation against human papillomavirus.Dom Cairns-Gibson, who heads one of them at Castlebrae High School in Craigmillar, said vaccine uptake there was considerably lower than the average for the whole of NHS Lothian but in the first year of the programme uptake increased."The thing we have noticed is the increase in confidence," he said. "We've got an ongoing partnership with the school, so they know our scientists, it's trusted people who are coming in and telling them this information."We noticed there was quite a lack of knowledge on HPV and a lot of people conflated it with HIV, so they just didn't necessarily know what it was, why they needed to get it." Pupils at the school are encouraged to ask questions about vaccines and HPV. They also discuss how vaccines can offer protection to a whole community as well as looking at the many different HPV viruses through the microscope.
JJ, who is in S2, had been worried about getting his vaccine but after taking part in the workshop decided to go ahead."I had worries about getting the jag because I don't want to get it, but I had also don't want to get the virus," he said. "It will help more because it shows you what happens if you don't get it."Razan, who is 13, said: "I understand more about it and getting more information helps you not get scared."Ellie, 13, said: "If you don't get it then you are more at risk, but not only are you more at risk of getting yourself ill but you are risk of getting other people ill who may not be able to get the vaccine because of medical issues."
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Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Addicts slumped in doorways, discarded needles and more dealers, life beside SNP's drugs consumption room
Slumped in a doorway surrounded by drugs paraphernalia an addict lies collapsed in a drug-induced haze. Yards away are grassy areas littered with drugs 'debris' – hypodermic needles and heroin pipes. Just around the corner, and, sadly with more than a hint of irony, sits the SNP 's £2.3million 'harm reduction' centre that was opened to stop this very thing happening. When he visited with great fanfare in January John Swinney proclaimed Britain's first safer drugs consumption room as a 'significant step forward' in tackling Scotland's appalling record of harm and deaths caused by drugs. Yet, residents and businesses talk of a 'living hell' and are now threatening to quit the area as they are met with daily scenes of drug addicts injecting in the street, discarded needles strewn around their neighbourhood and drug dealing. The facility in question is The Thistle, officially referred to as a 'safer drugs consumption room'. Those less supportive of its operation say it is nothing more than a heroin 'shooting gallery'. It allows addicts to inject their own drugs under medical supervision in a bid to reduce overdose deaths and cut discarded needles in public places. Such is the SNP government's support for the venture they have committed to backing it with £2million of public cash – every year. However, for many living and working in the area, its opening has been far from a positive development. Many believe the problem of addicts openly taking drugs in the streets has increased as well as the proliferation of dirty needles being discarded in their neighbourhoods and drug dealing. This week the Mail on Sunday visited the area to speak to residents and businesses and see first-hand the situation they find themselves in. It did not take long to understand why they are angry. In a patch of grass facing a row of houses a pile of litter was the first sign of drug use. Wrappers for needles, handed out by health professionals, lie next to state-issued 'foil' – provided to addicts to help them take a hit safely. Elsewhere we find dirty needles, used and discarded where anyone, including children, could suffer a needlestick injury. Even in areas where specially-designed needle bins have been installed there are still used syringes lying in the open. We also encountered faeces-covered clothing discarded in areas littered with dirty needles. One addict, having finished shooting up, had chosen to stick their dirty syringe into the grass where they'd been sitting – a health threat left for others to deal with. No wonder local people are furious at the situation. Resident Vanessa Paton said: 'I have sympathy for these people but they're not interested or responsible and this room is just facilitating their addiction. They're saying this project is in its infancy, but it's already like Beirut, it's like living in a war zone. 'It's like the day of the living dead and we're being told this is normal and the project is working. You're encouraging and enabling people, not helping anyone to come off drugs.' Martin Keown, is the director of Calton M.O.T. Centre, which is just a four-minute walk from The Thistle. He said: 'Since that building was opened, our car park space has become overrun by addicts and their needles. It's also become a dumping ground for all the drugs kits containing needles, alcohol swabs, and foil spoons. 'Even though I've spent £18,000 to install a new fence and a solid steel gate at my own expense, users are still jumping over the fence to hit up in my yard. They're leaving used needles, and sometimes even fully loaded needles that are ready to go.' He added: 'A few months ago we found two fully loaded needles propped up against the fence posts like pencils, as if the addicts set them up to use but then got distracted. 'My kids found it and said: 'Dad we've just found something bad that looks like blood in the yard.' They're nine and six.' Footage filmed inside the car park shows an addict brazenly perched against a car, as he prepares to inject himself in the open despite being less than 200 yards from the taxpayer-funded facility designed for that very purpose. The locals who encounter, challenge and talk to some of the addicts who engage in this behaviour say there are numerous reasons why they are still taking drugs in the open. Some have said they will not go to the centre as they distrust the authorities, while others say they need to get their fix immediately after buying drugs, without having to walk to Hunter Street where The Thistle is based. Linda Watson, 68, is a community activist, who was raised in the area. She said: 'A lot of users are not using the actual facility. They are coming here simply because they know there's a supply here. We're just being used as guinea pigs, we're part of a big experiment and there's no-one here to support us. The drug littering has been diabolical, some hit spots ended up with a total carpet of paraphernalia and syringes.' 'I love where I live, we were all brought up here, but people just don't feel safe anymore. People are publicly injecting themselves, they don't even try to hide it.' She added: 'A few weeks ago there was someone sitting in the play park when kids are cutting through to get to school, with his trousers down blatantly shooting up.' The impact of is making it harder for some businesses to operate. Janet Rogers, 55, started working in Bobbi D's salon on nearby Gallowgate in 1989 and worked her way up till she eventually took it over. She said: 'A lot of older people come to me because my business has been going for so long. But a lot of them don't want to come out now because they're scared. They're getting intimidated by dealers and users – there's loads of them just hanging about, lurking. 'They're getting in the closes beside the shop. I've seen plenty of shooting up, they leave needles and tin foil lying about outside the shop, it's terrible.' Ms Rogers fears she will have to close up as a result of the issues she is facing. She added: 'This shop has been my whole life and I just feel totally burnt out with it all, it's just soul-destroying.' The idea behind The Thistle is that by allowing addicts to inject their own drugs under medical supervision, the number of people suffering an overdose can be reduced as well as the number of discarded needles. However, in light of our investigation, the Scottish Conservatives have called for the SNP administration to end its 'reckless experiment'. MSP Annie Wells, who acts as the party's drugs spokeswoman, said: 'The SNP's flagship drug consumption room is making life a misery for local residents and businesses. 'They pinned all their hopes on state-sponsored drug taking, but their solution is failing. Locals are being left to clean up the SNP's mess. 'If the Nationalists continue down this road, businesses near The Thistle will be left with no choice than to sell up and move away. 'SNP ministers should call time on this reckless experiment and finally back the game-changing Right to Recovery Bill, which would enshrine in law a right to treatment.' The Thistle, which has already seen more than 250 addicts use its facilities to inject more than 3,000 times in total, is run by Glasgow City Health and Social Care Partnership. Councillor Allan Casey, city convener for addictions, said: 'We understand the ongoing concerns from residents. We have a community forum set up and running specifically for residents and businesses to attend to allow us to hear directly from them and take necessary actions. 'However, to suggest crime and drug use are new problems in this community is a blatant denial of decades of challenges this community has faced. 'The Thistle is not the cause of these issues — it is part of the solution. In fact, the Thistle has undoubtedly saved lives that would have otherwise been lost thanks to the intervention of staff.' The Scottish Government said it recognises people's concerns and that its partners 'are addressing them through outreach work, ongoing needle uplift operations, and plans to expand public needle disposal bins'. It also said 'a comprehensive independent evaluation' will examine the service's impact and that research and evaluation from similar facilities around the world has shown such facilities 'can reduce levels of public drug consumption and publicly discarded drug-related litter'.


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE 'Neil Gray isn't fit to be Scotland's Health Secretary' mother claims
A mother whose disabled son was left languishing in agony on an 11-month NHS waiting list has slammed Neil Gray and said he is not fit to be Health Secretary. Vicki Tocher, 34, battled for almost a year to get her eight-year-old son Isaac in front of doctors after he suffered a traumatic brain injury while at school. Since the incident in June 2024, the once peaceable and happy boy has suffered excruciating migraines, regularly screaming at the top of his lungs for 'help' and for 'Mum'. The family's MSP, Roz McCall, has highlighted Isaac's ordeal twice in First Minister's Questions – and during the latest exchange, John Swinney promised to organise a meeting between Mrs Tocher and the Health Secretary. But last night – just days after meeting Mr Gray – the mother-of-three hit out at the embattled SNP minister and said he should not be in his position. The broadside comes as Mr Gray is at the centre of a fresh 'limogate' scandal over his taxpayer-funded chauffeured trips to a pub and after he was last week declared 'missing in action' after going on a 'junket' to Japan as Scotland's worst-ever cancer waiting times were revealed. Mrs Tocher said: 'This is a man who is more interested in appearing like a celebrity and I have no faith in Neil Gray as a Health Secretary.' She added: 'There was no professionalism, there was no empathy, and I have absolutely no faith that Neil Gray can address the matter.' Asked if he should continue in his role, she said: 'Absolutely not.' The family's ordeal began in June 2024, when Isaac, who has an existing brain disorder and autism, was placed in seclusion by teachers at a primary school near Dunfermline. He became distressed and started to violently bang his head against the wall. Teachers, according to a whistleblower account later obtained by the family, watched on and failed to intervene. Since the horrifying incident, Mrs Tocher has witnessed her son's condition deteriorate and believes the injuries he suffered have prompted an onset of painful migraines and light sensitivity. Once a cheerful boy who enjoyed nothing more than singing nursery rhymes with his twin sister, Amaris, and his younger brother Abel, 6, Isaac's life became isolated while waiting for vital NHS treatment, Mrs Tocher said. In an interview with the MailOnline, she told how he was put on an NHS Fife waiting list for an MRI scan, but only received one last month after an 11-month wait. She said: 'Isaac was always full of life, he loved the outdoors. Now if the sun is too bright, he just hides under his duvet. The level of enjoyment in his life has been absolutely debilitated by the one incident, and then further exacerbated by medical negligence.' After Tory MSP Ms McCall's latest intervention at FMQs about the family's case in March, a meeting was set up between Mrs Tocher and Mr Gray for June 12. During the discussion, she asked Mr Gray to fast-track a move from the NHS Fife health board, which Mrs Tocher fears does not have adequate resources to help her son amid a 'postcode lottery', to NHS Lothian for specialist future care. But she said the Health Secretary – who turned up late for the meeting at Holyrood – appeared unmoved by the family's plight. Ms McCall said: 'It was clear from that meeting Mr Gray hadn't even read the briefing we'd sent in advance. That isn't just disappointing, it shows a shocking lack of seriousness or care from a Cabinet Secretary meant to be responsible for Scotland's NHS.' Mr Gray said last night: 'I thank Ms Tocher for taking the time to meet with me and share her views on healthcare for her son. 'I'm deeply sorry that her experience did not meet the standard we expect of all health boards. 'It is not appropriate for ministers or officials to intervene in clinical decisions but officials have followed up with NHS Fife on the concerns raised by Ms Tocher.'


The Independent
10 hours ago
- The Independent
Mother launches petition over changes to cervical cancer screening
Gemma Barley, whose family has a history of cervical cancer, discovered abnormal cells during a routine three-year check-up, despite her previous screening being clear. She is worried about new NHS England guidelines that extend cervical screening intervals from three to five years for women aged 25-49 who test negative for HPV. Ms Barley, a mother of one, fears these extended intervals could endanger women's lives, citing her own experience where abnormalities appeared quickly between screenings. She has launched a petition to reverse the changes, arguing that rapid cellular changes necessitate more frequent monitoring. NHS England and the Department of Health and Social Care have defended the new guidelines, stating they are based on robust scientific evidence and the increased accuracy of HPV testing.