
Two young people have died following an outbreak of meningitis in Kent. According to BBC reporting, a further 11 individuals are critically ill in hospital.
The first individual to die was an as-yet-unnamed student at the University of Kent. The second was Juliette, a year-13 student at Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School in Faversham.
The outbreak is thought to be linked to an event at Club Chemistry, a nightclub in Canterbury. As of yet, the specific strain of the infection hasn’t been identified.
Meningitis outbreak: UKHSA response
The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) is currently managing the response to the outbreak. The organisation is contacting over 30,000 people in the Canterbury area with information.
The University of Kent has stated that it’s moving assessments and exams online as a precautionary measure. Given that we’re currently in an exam season, this is likely to cause a not-insignificant level of disruption.
A spokesperson also said that students who have been in contact with infected individuals are being offered advice.
On campus, hundreds of students stood in line today wearing masks, waiting for preventative antibiotics. Students also reported seeing ambulances and hazmat suit-clad teams outside of their accommodation.
Meanwhile, the guardians of pupils from Norton Knatchbull School in Ashford have also been warned that a sixth-former has been admitted to hospital on suspicion of meningitis.
What to watch out for
Meningitis is a bacterial infection of the meninges, the protective membranes that wrap the brain and spinal cord. It’s most common in young people, from babies to young adults, although anyone can be affected.
If it isn’t treated quickly, the infection can cause permanent brain and nerve damage, or even life-threatening sepsis. Having been infected before is not guarantee that you can’t be re-infected.
Asymptomatic carriers of the infection can spread it to others via spit or saliva. Usually, this will take the form of coughs and sneezes, although it can also be transferred by sharing cutlery or kissing.
Trish Mannes, the regional lead for UKHSA South East, stated that:
Meningococcal disease can progress rapidly, so it’s essential that students and staff are alert to the signs and symptoms of meningococcal meningitis and septicaemia.
Students are particularly at risk of missing the early warning signs of meningitis because they can be easily confused with other illnesses such as a bad cold, flu or even a hangover.
According to the NHS website, symptoms to watch out for include:
- a high temperature (fever)
- being sick
- a headache
- a rash that does not fade when a glass is rolled over it (but a rash will not always develop)
- a stiff neck
- a dislike of bright lights
- drowsiness or unresponsiveness
- seizures (fits)
A rare outbreak
After a confirmed meningococcal outbreak, specialist lab testing is needed to confirm the exact strain of the bacteria responsible. Blood and cerebrospinal fluid tests allow technicians to determine the bacterium’s serogroup and genome.
This information is highly important, as it allows healthcare workers to determine whether a targeted vaccination programme is needed, and whether individual cases are linked. In this case, the wait to know the exact strain may be anywhere between three and seven days.
Outbreaks of meningitis of this magnitude are rare in the UK. However, the BBCreported that senior scientists believe that group B meningococcus bacteria are the most likely cause.
Just last October, the UK government announced that there were 378 cases of invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) in 2024-25. Of these, MenB accounted for 313 (82.6%) of the cases.
Crucially, the Men B vaccine was introduced back in 2025, but only for babies. This means that the teens and young adults who are being affected in Kent wouldn’t have received the vaccine. As things stand, the only way to access the vaccine for individuals outside of infancy is privately, through high-street pharmacies.
Vaccine skepticism on the rise
With vaccine skepticism on the rise in the UK, the US and elsewhere, the current outbreak in Kent is a tragic reminder of the lifesaving necessity of immunisation.
In the US, the rise of anti-vaxxers was underlined by Trump’s appointment of Robert F. Kennedy Jr, a noted vaccine conspiracy theorist, as health secretary. And sure enough, last year, the American Centre for Disease Control was forced to take down its statement that ‘vaccines don’t cause autism’.
Meanwhile, in the UK, Reform leader Nigel Farage is also busy stoking up the conspiracists. In particular, he made vague claims that the Covid-19 jab wasn’t a real vaccine, stating that:
I believe in vaccinations when they’re vaccinations. I don’t think what happened with Covid were vaccinations. You have to keep having them every 6 months.
This anti-science pandering to the extreme right is dangerous – it’s an active threat to public health, and one that we must oppose at every turn. If not, we’ll only see more tragedies like the scenes unfolding in Kent right now.
Featured image via the Canary
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