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posted by janrinok on Monday November 27 2017, @08:27PM   Printer-friendly

England's National Health Service is urging parents to get their children vaccinated for the flu ahead of the holiday season to protect grandparents and other vulnerable relatives:

Flu vaccines administered through a nasal spray rather than an injection have been rolled out this autumn for two and three-year-olds, and children in reception class and years one to four in primary school. Children are super-spreaders because of the greater likelihood of them contracting flu at nursery or school, where germs are passed on at a rapid rate. But only 18% of school-age children have had the nasal spray immunisation, according to the latest figures.

Prof Keith Willett, NHS England's medical director for acute care, said: "Flu can be spread more easily by children, especially to vulnerable relatives such as older grandparents, those with heart or lung conditions and pregnant family members. Last year, millions of people missed out on their free vaccination and yet it's one simple, common sense step to help us all stay healthy this winter."

With less than a month until Christmas, the NHS is urging parents to book their children in for the free vaccination to help curb infection over the festive season, when family get-togethers can spread the infection.

Meanwhile, the Daily Mirror (a tabloid) claims that Russian agents are spreading anti-vaccination propaganda in the UK in an effort to destabilize the country:

Russian cyber units are spreading false information about flu and measles jabs in the UK, experts warn. [Ed's Note: The current flu immunisation is applied via a nasal spray - there are no 'jabs' involved.] Vladimir Putin is believed to want to erode trust in US and European governments. The state-sponsored units are spreading the lies on social media to destabilise Britain, it is claimed. The Kremlin has previously been accused of attempting to influence Brexit and Scottish independence. Now, it is feared it is trying to create distrust over flu jabs and the MMR measles vaccine.

[...] Security services are so concerned over the threat to public health and security that Government departments have been ordered to monitor social media and flag up risky articles. Health chiefs have had emerg­ency meetings over the spread "fake news" over vaccination campaigns. [...] We can reveal public health officials are investigating whether an outbreak of measles last week in Liverpool and Leeds was fuelled by parents not vaccinating children due to "false information read on the internet".

Also at BBC. BBC's collection of newspaper covers.


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  • (Score: 2) by Entropy on Tuesday November 28 2017, @04:52PM (1 child)

    by Entropy (4228) on Tuesday November 28 2017, @04:52PM (#602568)

    Since they are usually mismatched the flu vaccines on more years than they don't, then I guess they just make you sick with no corresponding immunity boost?

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  • (Score: 2) by Aiwendil on Tuesday November 28 2017, @09:53PM

    by Aiwendil (531) on Tuesday November 28 2017, @09:53PM (#602688) Journal

    No. For a several reasons, but let's pick one commonly missed:
    Even a mismatch can give protection up to about 60% (ok, that isn't common, the common range is in the 30-50% while the entire range 20-70% is represented [which roughly is the effectiveness of a matched vaccination in the elderly]) (they did a meta analysis about it a few years ago)

    Quite frankly even a 20% protection means it is still worth it if enough people get the shot, just like a 100% protection would be almost useless if very few got it (mainly due to the viruses by the sick people near them would mutate into something that would break through - this is how we create new strains)

    If you think "mismatch" means "we accidently put vaccine in for the rabies in there" instead of "we just didn't get as good a protection as we could have" then I guess it is understandable if you are sceptical about it.