Experts warn low take up of crucial HPV vaccine is putting children at risk for developing cancer later in life By Ethan Ennals Published: 21:03 EDT, 26 October 2024 | Updated: 21:07 EDT, 26 October 2024 e-mail View comments Thousands of children are missing out every year on a crucial anti-cancer vaccine, experts warn. The jab is offered to children aged 12 to 13 to protect them against human papillomavirus. The virus, known as HPV , can trigger cancers, including those in the head, neck and cervix.
While the highly effective vaccine has been offered to all girls in Year 8 since 2008, and all boys since 2019, nearly half of all eligible children are not getting it, which experts warn is making them vulnerable later in life. The take-up is also markedly lower than the MMR vaccination. In England, about eight out of ten children get the combined measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine.
Experts say this disparity is partly due to the public perception that the HPV vaccine is meant to prevent sexually transmitted infections so is not relevant to children. The jab is offered to children aged 12 to 13 to protect them against human papillomavirus (Stock Image) Researchers also say that, since the HPV vaccine is given to older children, parents are less keen to get them jabbed compared with when they are babies because they believe they are less likely to become seriously unwell. HPV is spread through skin-to-skin contact during sexual activity.
About 80 per cent of unvaccinated pe.