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The UK Health Security Agency has urged parents to check their children’s vaccinations are up to date amid fears of a back-to-school surge of diseases like measles and whooping cough due to falling vaccine rates across England. NHS figures show 88.4 per cent of youngsters in Hertfordshire had both doses of the MMR vaccine by their fifth birthday in 2023-24.

This was below the 95 per cent target set by the World Health Organisation, and about the same level as the previous year. Nationally, 83.9 per cent of five-year-olds were fully vaccinated against MMR last year – down from 84.



5% the year before, and the lowest level since 2010-11. Dr Vanessa Saliba, UKHSA consultant epidemiologist, said: “I encourage all parents to take up the offer of vaccinations for their children at the right time, to give them the best protection from preventable diseases. “Childhood vaccines prevent babies and children from suffering needlessly and can even be life-saving.

” She said vaccination helps to prevent from spreading the disease to more vulnerable people. “It only takes one case of measles to get into a school or nursery where many children are unprotected for numbers to suddenly surge,” Dr Saliba added. Separate figures from the UKHSA show there were 2,465 confirmed cases of measles across the country from January to September 9 this year.

More than half of these were recorded among children under 11. The capital had the most confirmed measles cases, with 1,177. There were 177.

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