A mum has spoken of her living nightmare after her daughter died at the age of just 10-years-old from measles complications.
Heartbroken Rebecca Archer has bravely spoken about her anguish in a desperate bid to encourage parents to have their children vaccinated - to protect them and others.
Bolton has five suspected cases of people contracting the virus.
Uptake of childhood vaccines protecting against measles, whooping cough, and meningitis in Bolton has fallen following the Covid pandemic, new figures show.
The growth of 'vaccine hesitancy' has led the UK Health Security Agency to launch campaigns aiming to boost uptake as cases of measles and whooping cough are surging across the UK.
Figures from the UKHSA show 87.6 per cent of five-year-olds in Bolton last year had both doses of the MMR vaccine – which protects against measles, mumps and rubella.
The uptake was down from 88.8 per cent in 2019-20, before the pandemic hit.
Rebecca is backing a campaign launched to drive up childhood vaccinations.
Her daughter, Renae died just last September from problems caused by having measles as a baby.
She caught the infection at just five months old when she was too young to be vaccinated.
Renae seemingly recovered after a few days of being poorly, but a decade later she developed a rare brain disease, subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) caused by her previous measles infection which led to her death.
Rebecca said: “It’s like a nightmare, it’s still hard to believe that’s why Renae’s not here anymore. Because of having the measles ten years previous.
“She was poorly for a few days… after that, everything went back to normal - she was fit and healthy.”
But 10 years later, Renae’s school phoned to say she’d had a seizure.
“She had one every week, and then I think it was the third seizure where they [did] an MRI, and then that’s when they discovered there was some swelling on her brain. Her motor functions started to deteriorate – she just slowly couldn’t speak or eat,” added Rebecca, who lives in neighbouring Salford.
“When she went into ICU, they didn’t know what was actually causing [it]…it was actually the measles and it was SSPE. And that’s when they told me it was going to be fatal. And then we had to make a decision to turn the machines off.
“[Renae hadn’t] had the MMR because she was under 12 months old. If there wasn’t an outbreak and more kids had their vaccinations, then she wouldn’t have got the measles in the first place. And it wouldn’t have ultimately ended her life.”
Measles is one of the world’s most infectious diseases with estimates showing that one infected adult or child can pass the disease onto around 15 other unvaccinated people. It spreads very easily among those who are unvaccinated, especially in nurseries, schools and universities.
Catching measles can lead to life changing issues for adults and children, such as blindness, deafness and swelling of the brain (encephalitis) – and those in certain groups, including babies, pregnant women, and people with weakened immunity, are at increased risk of these complications.
There is currently no medical treatment for measles, however, two doses of the MMR vaccine can give someone effective lifelong protection against becoming seriously unwell with the disease.
Dr Manisha Kumar, chief medical officer for NHS Greater Manchester said: “Rebecca’s story is one example of many, that illustrate why we need to urgently reverse the decline in the uptake of childhood vaccinations, in order to protect not only ourselves and our families, but our wider communities.
“We hope that through brave people like Rebecca coming forward with their personal stories, combined with the multi-media campaign, it will serve as a reminder that these diseases have not gone away and it will encourage parents and guardians to check their children’s vaccination status and book appointments if any immunisations have been missed.
"Two doses of the MMR vaccine are needed to get life-long protection against measles, mumps and rubella. Simply by ensuring you have both doses you not only protect you and your family against the illness, but also those who you come into contact with who may be vulnerable.”
In the United Kingdom, over 20 million cases of measles have been prevented since vaccination against the disease began during the 1980s, according to data from UKHSA. Data also shows that over 4,500 lives- 81 lives per year-across the United Kingdom have been saved as a result.
Find out more about NHS vaccinations at: NHS vaccinations and when to have them at www.nhs.uk
Symptoms of measles appear 7-10 days after contact with the virus and include:
• cold-like symptoms such as runny or blocked nose, sneezing and cough
• red, sore, watery eyes
• high temperature (fever), which may reach around 40OC / 104OF
• a non-itchy, red-brown rash usually appears 3-5 days later (sometimes starts around the ears before spreading to rest of the body), spots may be raised and join to form blotchy patches – which may be harder to see on darker skin tones
• small white spots may appear inside cheeks and the back of lips (for a few days)
If you or a family member develops any symptoms of measles contact your GP by phone. Please do not go to your GP, walk-in centre or any other healthcare setting without calling ahead, as measles is very infectious.
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