logo
New gonorrhoea vaccine to be rolled out in Wales from August

New gonorrhoea vaccine to be rolled out in Wales from August

Yahoo6 hours ago

A new gonorrhoea vaccine will be made available as part of a sexual health programme.
The vaccine rollout, which will begin in Wales in August 2025, follows a recent launch in England and will make the UK the first nation in the world to introduce such a scheme.
The news comes as Public Health Wales encourages people to take up the vaccine when it becomes available, alongside practising safe sex and regular testing, following findings from its latest annual report on sexual health trends.
Professor Daniel Thomas, consultant epidemiologist at Public Health Wales, said: "We are asking people to stay informed and stay safe.
"Use condoms, test regularly, and take up the gonorrhoea vaccine when it becomes available.
"We all have a part to play in protecting our sexual health and that of our partners."
The vaccine is being introduced amid concerns over rising antibiotic resistance.
Public Health Wales continues to recommend annual STI testing for all sexually active individuals, particularly those with new or multiple partners.
Since its launch in 2020, the Test and Post home testing service now accounts for half of all STI tests in Wales.
These confidential kits can be ordered online at www.shwales.online or collected from community venues.
Although there was a 40 per cent drop in gonorrhoea cases in Wales last year, the infection remains at historically high levels following several years of increases.
Gonorrhoea is often symptomless, making regular testing and vaccine uptake especially important.
Chlamydia diagnoses also fell by 16 per cent, but it remains the most commonly reported bacterial STI in Wales, particularly among 15 to 24-year-olds.
Public Health Wales cautioned that the decline in reported cases might be due to changes in testing patterns rather than a true reduction in transmission.
The organisation also flagged ongoing concerns about high rates of reinfection and co-infection, suggesting continued risky behaviours and underdiagnosis.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mum-of-five 'begged for help' before hospital death
Mum-of-five 'begged for help' before hospital death

Yahoo

time30 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Mum-of-five 'begged for help' before hospital death

A care worker "begged and pleaded" for help before dying shortly after childbirth, her mother said. Laura-Jane Seaman, 36, told staff she could feel bleeding after delivering her fifth child at Broomfield Hospital in Chelmsford, Essex, in December 2022. Her mum, Sarah Shead, supports a national inquiry, and said of her daughter: "She told them she was dying and no-one took her seriously until it was too late and the damage was done." Broomfield's, chief executive, Matthew Hopkins said care was an "absolute priority" after Health Secretary Wes Streeting announced a national inquiry into maternity services. The final list of trusts involved was not revealed in Monday's announcement. However, the BBC was told bosses at the Mid and South Essex NHS Foundation Trust (MSE) would meet with government officials as part of the investigation. A coroner in Auguest 2024 ruled multiple failures by staff amounted to "neglect" and led to Ms Seaman's death two days after giving birth at the MSE-run hospital. The mother-of-five, from Witham, Essex had repeatedly warned of feeling dizzy and numb, alongside an internal "gushing". "She begged for her life, she begged me for her life and I thought they were doing everything they could do," Ms Shead told the BBC. "I will forever live with the fact that I didn't shout and scream and say 'What are you doing?', because they appeared to be doing everything. "But what we were seeing was not what was actually happening." Ms Seaman had been known to MSE officials to be at high risk of heavy bleeding post-birth. She was able to breastfeed her newborn before her condition deteriorated, later suffering a significant peritoneal haemorrhage that proved fatal. "I'm the mother that lost a daughter who was fit, well and had a 99.9% of surviving had they realised her spleen had ruptured earlier," Ms Shead added. She said the national inquiry, due to begin this summer and report back by December, was overdue. "I think this is the only way for the health service to learn where it needs to improve," Ms Shead explained. "There are too many deaths, too many losses. My hope is this happens quickly." Maternity care at Broomfield Hospital was rated "inadequate" by the Care Quality Commission (CQC) in January. Mr Hopkins said he was overseeing an action plan to improve the safety of its care. "The care and safety of families using our maternity and neonatal services is an absolute priority," he continued. "We will support any work to tackle health inequalities and improve maternity services for families across the country." Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X. National inquiry announced after maternity failings Mum dies after hospital's 'basic failures' - report Mother died after neglect by hospital - coroner Mid and South Essex NHS Foundation Trust

I paid £15,000 for arranging IVF – then the service went bust
I paid £15,000 for arranging IVF – then the service went bust

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

I paid £15,000 for arranging IVF – then the service went bust

IVF patients are being warned over unregulated "concierge clinics" after a popular one went bust leaving scores of clients without treatment or refunds. As the number of privately funded IVF cycles has risen, online concierge companies have emerged, acting as "middlemen" between patients, donors and doctors. The fertility watchdog has said that as these clinics do not provide IVF treatment directly, it does not have powers to regulate them. It is calling for the law to be strengthened to protect patients. Syreeta Sandhu lost nearly £15,000 when her concierge clinic went bust. "You're on your knees," she said. "Upset has turned to frustration and anger." The 40-year-old mother-of-two contacted online firm Apricity Fertility after four failed rounds of IVF and five miscarriages, in the hope of having a third child. She paid Apricity, which matched her with an egg donor and contracted established clinic King's Fertility. She was due to start treatment in December last year when her appointments were cancelled without explanation. Syreeta found out via the company's app that it was ceasing operations on 1 January. When she contacted King's, the clinic said data protection rules meant it did not have access to her file or details of her egg donor. It had not been paid by Apricity so her treatment could not begin. "When you're on this journey, every month counts. You'll do anything, and you do throw lots of money at it," she said. "It takes a long time to meet [medical staff] you can trust," she said. "I spent almost 12 months building that trust and it just dropped off." Concierge clinics offer services like matching patients with donors and doctors, booking appointments and posting medication. It is not clear how many there are operating in the UK but experts believe their number is growing. Satellite arrangements – where patients attend medical appointments with one doctor, usually their own GP, and then undergo the IVF process elsewhere – is an established set-up in fertility care. But concierge clinics don't have physical premises or store eggs, sperm or embryos themselves. The fertility watchdog, the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), is warning patients that these new services are not covered by its protections. Clare Ettinghausen, director of strategy and corporate affairs at the HFEA, said: "The fallout from Apricity's closure and the effect it had on patients highlights how the current law does not reflect the range and type of fertility treatments being offered today." She said the watchdog was calling for the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act to be revised to take account of the different ways fertility services are provided. Syreeta is one of 52 patients owed money by Apricity. The company owes a total of £119,000 to its patients, according to the liquidator appointed to manage its debts, Cork Gully. Beth Rodgers, 32, from Belfast has Turner syndrome, a rare genetic condition that means her ovaries do not produce eggs. Because Northern Ireland has a severe shortage of donor eggs, Beth had to secure a donor in England. She and her partner paid Apricity £4,600 and had been matched with an egg donor. "Then I saw a comment on a Facebook group saying 'thinking of everyone affected by the Apricity news,'" she said. "There was no communication, no number to call." The couple were able to claim some of the money back on their insurance but it did not cover a £385 fee for a doctor's appointment and £985 for donor compensation. "Time was probably the biggest thing I felt I lost. It was such a long process," said Beth. She has now restarted treatment with a regulated clinic. She has had appointments with a doctor in the Republic of Ireland and travelled to Manchester for the embryo transfer. That transfer was unsuccessful but she will be able to get another round of IVF on her insurance with a different egg donor. In recent years, more British couples have paid for private fertility treatment, in part because IVF on the NHS is a postcode lottery. Jonathan, not his real name, and his wife went through five failed rounds of IVF before they went to Apricity. They paid £10,000 for treatment with their savings and a loan. "We've been told there's no realistic chance of getting our money back," he said. "We haven't been able to resume treatment yet as we're still trying to raise finance." Cork Gully told Jonathan and other patients in a letter seen by the BBC: "It is unlikely that there will be funds to pay to patients." It said any affected patients should get in touch. The BBC asked Mel Chacksfield, who was chief executive of Apricity when it ceased operations, why the business had gone under and if patients would be refunded but she did not respond to our request. However, Caroline Noublanche, one of the company's founders and the previous chief executive, told the BBC it had "faced sudden and irreversible financial difficulties in December when planned investment from an investor was withdrawn". Prof Emily Jackson is a researcher in medical law and ethics at the London School of Economics. She said: "You need a licence to do things with embryos and sperm and eggs but you don't need any licence to offer to arrange things on the internet. "For people thinking about their options, it is probably sensible to opt for treatment in an HFEA-licensed clinic, because they have responsibilities towards patients in the event of closure." Those responsibilities mean that if an HFEA-licensed clinic closes, it has to give patients information and ensure they are supported. The clinic must also ensure all eggs, sperm and embryos that are in storage are kept safe. A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Social Care told BBC News: "While digital or 'virtual' clinics do not currently fall within the remit of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, ministers have met with its chair to discuss the emerging regulatory challenges. "The government is currently considering the HFEA's recommendations on modernising fertility law. We would advise all those looking at using digital clinics to carry out thorough research before making any decisions." King's Fertility, which was providing Syreeta's treatment, was a contractor of Apricity's and is now a creditor of the company. Its director, Dr Ippokratis Sarris, a consultant in reproductive medicine, said it was likely more concierge clinics would emerge in the future as patients look for convenience and flexibility. "The shift toward more remote and digital models of care is an inevitable progression in today's world. This is increasingly what patients want, and often prefer, so it's important that we don't deny them that choice." But he advised patients to do careful research before choosing a provider, and to be cautious about paying upfront for multi-cycle packages. "It's wise to look into how long a clinic has been established, who owns it (NHS, private individual, or private equity), and make an informed choice," he added. "We shouldn't resist change, but we do need to be proactive in shaping it responsibly." More single women and female couples having IVF Fertility patients sold unproven add-ons, HFEA says Couple shocked at free IVF rejection by NHS

US Sees Limited Damage to Iran's Nuclear Sites From Strikes
US Sees Limited Damage to Iran's Nuclear Sites From Strikes

Bloomberg

timean hour ago

  • Bloomberg

US Sees Limited Damage to Iran's Nuclear Sites From Strikes

Good morning. US intelligence sees limited damage to Iran's atomic sites. The UK is buying American-made fighter jets. And scientists discover 20 previously unknown viruses in bats. Listen to the day's top stories. American airstrikes didn't destroy Iran's core nuclear components below ground, according to early Pentagon assessments, and were said to have set the program back several months to a year. The UN watchdog urged fresh inspections of the sites. White House officials dismissed the reports as false and Donald Trump said the nuclear sites are 'completely destroyed.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store