
Meningitis cases in Reading are pupils at two schools, UKHSA says
Meningitis cases in Reading are pupils at two schools, UKHSA says49 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleIndy Almroth-WrightSouth of EnglandBBCHenley College said one of its students died earlier this...
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Key developments are emerging from the global stage. Meningitis cases in Reading are pupils at two schools, UKHSA says49 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleIndy Almroth-WrightSouth of EnglandBBCHenley College said one of its students died earlier this weekTwo people ill with meningitis in Reading have been confirmed as pupils at two schools. The students - one from Reading Blue Coat School and the other at Highdown Secondary School and Sixth Form - are receiving treatment, the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said. The UKHSA announced yesterday that a sixth-form pupil at Henley College in Oxfordshire had died earlier this week - and that it had identified a social network that connected the three young people.
Close contacts linked to all three are being offered antibiotics as a precaution. Henley College principal Simon Spearman said its thoughts were with the student's familyIn a statement, Henley College said its "thoughts and sincere condolences are with the student's family and friends at this extremely difficult time". "We are supporting those affected within our college community and are following the advice and guidance given by the UK Health Security Agency," it added.
The Details
"Out of respect for the family, we will not be providing further detail at this time. "The UKHSA said it had identified a social network connecting the three cases but has not given fuller details on what links them. It said one case had been confirmed as Meningitis B (MenB) and it was awaiting further testing results.
It confirmed the case is not the same strain as MenB outbreaks earlier this year. Two months ago, two people died of MenB in Kent, linked to a nightclub in Canterbury, and in April, three young people contracted meningitis in Dorset. The agency said it was sharing information about the infection with students and parents at all affected schools.
It added the risk to the wider public was low. What are the symptoms of meningitis? Dr Shamez Ladhani, consultant epidemiologist at the UKHSA, told the it was "really unfortunate" to have had three separate outbreaks in such a short space of time.
What Experts Say
"This is a very rare disease but when it strikes it can be very lethal," Ladhani said. He said the picture in Reading was an "evolving situation". "Just like Kent was, just like Dorset...
it is difficult to know where it is going to go from here," he said. "Hopefully it will settle down. At the moment, every indication is that there is no increased risk to any of the students in Reading, but the situation is evolving and if that changes we will take action if needed.
"A pupil from Reading Blue Coat School has been confirmed as one of the three casesLadhani told Radio 4's Today programme: "We have the strain from one of the three cases and we know that it is completely distinct to the one that caused the outbreak in Kent and the one that caused the outbreak in Dorset. "We have identified a social network where these three are connected and we are almost certain that this is going to be the same strain.
The development has drawn wide international attention, with diplomatic circles watching closely.





