
Child with measles dies in hospital as experts fear virus 'could spread like wildfire'
A child has died in hospital after contracting measles - making them the second child in the UK to die following an infection in the last decade.
The child, who hasn't been formally identified, passed away at Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool. It is understood they were ill with measles and it is believed they also had other health problems.
It is not known whether the child who died had been vaccinated, but the jab provides 97 per cent protection against getting ill. Officials have since feared the virus could "spread like wildfire".
The Times reports. that it suggests Merseyside could be on the cusp of an outbreak.
Measles is highly contagious and an infected person remains infectious for up to ten days.
Professor Matt Ashton, director of public health for Liverpool, said: "I'm extremely worried that the potential is there for measles to really grab hold in our community. My concern is the unprotected population and it spreading like wildfire. That's why we're trying to be proactive. It's really important that people understand the seriousness of this."
Bosses at NHS Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool have taken the unprecedented step of sending an open letter to parents after kids were left 'seriously unwell' with measles infections. The letter says the reason there has been more cases of measles in children and young people is because fewer people are having the MMR vaccine, which protects against measles as well as two other viruses called mumps and rubella.
What are the symptoms of measles?
Measles usually starts with cold-like symptoms, followed by a rash a few days later. Some people may also get small spots in their mouth. The first symptoms include a runny or blocked nose, a high temperature, a cough, sneezing, and red, sore, watery eyes. A rash usually appears a few days later, starting on the face and behind the ears before spreading to the rest of the body.
Spots of the rash are sometimes raised and joined together to form blotchy patches, and they're not normally itchy. The rash looks brown or red on white skin and may be harder to see on brown or black skin, NHS guidance states, adding: "It's very unlikely to be measles if you've had both doses of the MMR vaccine or you've had measles before."
What you should do if you think you have measles
You should contact 111 or ask for an urgent GP appointment if you think you or your child may have measles, if your child is under one year old and has come into contact with someone who has measles, or if you've been in close contact with someone who has measles and are pregnant or have a weakened immune system.
You should also seek urgent medical advice if you or your child have a high temperature that has not come down after taking paracetamol or ibuprofen; you or your child have difficulty breathing – you may feel more short of breath than usual; your baby or young child is not feeding well, or taking less feeds or fluids than usual; you or your child are peeing less than usual (or your baby has fewer wet nappies); you or your child feels very unwell, or you're worried something is seriously wrong.
Anyone with measles should stay off work, school or nursery for at least four days from when the rash first appears, and try to avoid close contact with babies and anyone who is pregnant or has a weakened immune system.
Children are vaccinated after their first birthday and then again at 18 months. Anyone can request a jab if they missed out as a child.
Alder Hey Children's Hospital Trust told the Mirror: "To respect patient confidentiality, we can't comment on individual cases.
"We are concerned about the increasing number of children and young people who are contracting measles. Measles is a highly contagious viral illness which can cause children to be seriously unwell, requiring hospital treatment, and in rare cases, death.
"The number of children being treated at Alder Hey for effects and complications of measles is increasing (we have treated 17 since June). We treat children with a range of conditions and illnesses in our hospital, including those with compromised immunity due to other health issues, making them more susceptible to infections, including measles.
"We can prevent people, including children, from contracting measles through vaccination. Please protect yourself and vulnerable children and young people by ensuring you are fully vaccinated."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


North Wales Chronicle
28 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Measles death shows nation must ‘redouble' vaccine efforts, Streeting says
The Health Secretary stressed that vaccines 'save lives' and said the Government will be carrying out work throughout the remainder of the year to boost uptake. It follows reports over the weekend that a youngster, who was ill with measles and other health problems and was receiving treatment at Alder Hey Children's Hospital, had died. The Health Secretary appeared in front of MPs on Monday as the Health and Social Care Committee scrutinised the Government's 10-year health plan. When asked by Labour MP Danny Beales if the Government is doing enough to increase child vaccination rates, Mr Streeting said: 'Firstly, no child in this country should be dying of measles. 'And I'm extremely sorry to the poor family that's now grieving the loss of a child in those circumstances. 'This is why we have got to redouble our efforts on vaccination, and to make the case – and some of the improvements in the 10-year plan will help, in terms of having digital records of children's health that parents can check into the digital red book – that'll be really good. 'So it means on moments like, over the weekend, where someone's read an awful case in the media, parents can just quickly log on and think actually, did we get that jab? 'Are we up to date on our vaccinations? And we can also proactively invite people to vaccination. 'But we'll be doing a lot more on this throughout the remainder of the year in terms of trying to get vaccination uptakes, it saves lives.' Mr Beales highlighted that additional investment will be needed to increase vaccine uptake 'to get those areas that are 30% below the highest levels of vaccination in the country up to where they should be'. ⚠️Measles can be a serious illness. More than 1 in 10 children haven't had the MMR vaccine and they need 2 doses to get full protection. Find out more. — UK Health Security Agency (@UKHSA) July 14, 2025 Mr Streeting replied: 'And we do have significant resource already attached to public health information campaigns.' He vowed to write to the committee 'given the profile of this at the moment to share the work that we'll be doing to drive our vaccination rates'. Measles is highly infectious and can lead to serious complications. People with this infection have a number of cold and flu-like symptoms and a rash appears a few days after symptoms start. On rare occasions, measles can also lead to meningitis and brain swelling, which can cause long-term disabilities or even death. A statement published by Alder Hey on Sunday said it would not comment on individual cases, but that the hospital is 'concerned about the increasing number of children and young people who are contracting measles'. #Measles is highly contagious and can cause serious complications. 🏥 It's preventable with the #MMR vaccine, so make sure that you and your loved ones are up to date and catch up on any missed doses. ❤️ 🔗 — UK Health Security Agency (@UKHSA) July 14, 2025 Alder Hey said it has treated 17 children since June for the effects and complications of the disease. Since January 1 2025, there have been 529 laboratory confirmed measles cases reported in England, according to UKHSA data which was released on July 3. NHS England figures covering 2023/24 show that not a single vaccine met the target needed to ensure diseases cannot spread among youngsters. The World Health Organisation (WHO) says to achieve herd immunity – which stops illnesses transmitting across the population – at least 95% of children should receive their set of vaccine doses for each illness. Figures shows 91.9% of five-year-olds had received one dose of the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccine, the lowest level since 2010/11, while just 83.9% had received both doses, the lowest since 2009/10. Uptake of the first MMR dose at 24 months stood at 88.9% in 2023/24 – again, the lowest since 2009/10. In Liverpool, 73.4% of children received both doses of their MMR vaccine by their fifth birthday. Reacting to reports over the weekend, Dr Ben Kasstan-Dabush, assistant professor of global health and development at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine said: 'The child death in Liverpool is a tragic reminder that measles is not benign and can lead to serious complications including inflammation of the brain and death. 'Since 2023-25 we have been in a cycle of nasty measles outbreaks, indicating that the years of declining coverage are culminating in a new normal that no child needs to live with. 'Liverpool is home to neighbourhoods that are among the most deprived in England. 'Declining coverage in Liverpool and nationwide is happening amidst a relentless cost-of-living crisis, characterised by a generational decline in living standards, continued austerity and unequal pandemic recovery. 'Public health cannot hope for vaccination coverage to improve, it needs sustained resources to offer flexible services that work with parents as they are pushed to the brink by precarity and to fund the communications required to engage with diverse communities.'


Times
38 minutes ago
- Times
Wes Streeting says junior doctors' strike action is ‘unconscionable'
The health secretary has said that junior doctors' actions are 'unconscionable', as a member of his own family is waiting for an 'inevitable' call to tell them their procedure has been cancelled due to the impending strikes. Wes Streeting, speaking at the health and care select committee, said that he 'cannot fathom' why 'any doctor in good conscience would make it harder for managers to make sure we have safe staffing levels'. The comments come after resident doctors, as junior doctors are now known, who are members of the British Medical Association (BMA) voted to strike for five days from July 25. They have demanded a 29 per cent pay rise, which they have said would bring them back to 2008 pay levels. He said: 'We can mitigate against the impact of strikes, and we will, but what we cannot do is promise that there will be no consequence and no delay, no further suffering, because there are lots of people whose procedures are scheduled over that weekend period and in the period subsequently. 'The NHS has to recover from the industrial action, who will see their operations and appointments delayed,' Streeting told the House of Commons' committee. 'I have a relative in that position,' he added. 'My family are currently dreading what I fear is an inevitable phone call saying that there is going to be a delay to this procedure. And I just think this is an unconscionable thing to do to the public, not least given the 28.9 per cent pay rise.' BMA representatives and the health secretary are due to meet this week, 'to see if we can avert strike action', Streeting said. He added that the doctors had 'chosen confrontation' and that he did not see 'a reasonable trade union partner in the RDC section of the BMA at this time'. Streeting added: 'The other thing that I have found actually shockingly irresponsible about the BMA's position is their leaders seem to be telling their members not to inform their trusts or their employers if they're going out on strike. 'Now, I might not agree with the BMA strike action, but I do accept they have a right to strike. I do accept that they follow the rules in order to go on strike. 'What I cannot fathom is how any doctor in good conscience would make it harder for managers to make sure we have safe staffing levels. So I just think the sort of the BMA's approach to this from start to finish has been completely wrong.' Sir Jim Mackey, the NHS England chief, told the committee that the action would be 'hugely disruptive'. In September, junior doctors voted to accept a government pay deal of 22.3 per cent on average over two years. In the most recent pay award, for 2025-2026, junior doctors were given a four per cent uplift, plus £750 — giving an average rise of 5.4 per cent. There aren't many people who would volunteer to be the public face of the most unpopular junior doctor strikes to date. The task has fallen to 'unashamedly socialist' Emma Runswick, the current deputy chairwoman of the council, and one of the highest-ranking junior doctors in the BMA. The daughter of Jeremy Corbyn-backing trade unionists, Runswick has described herself as 'very left wing'. Runwick's mother, Kathy Runswick, is the former chairwoman of the Wallasey Constituency Labour Party. In an interview on the BBC's Today programme on Monday morning, Runswick was asked if she was a 'militant lefty'. In response, she said: 'Oh yeah, I'm left wing. But that doesn't reflect necessarily the whole variety of views that doctors have. And actually it is our aim: if you are on the left, you want the NHS to be an excellent service, you want patients to get good care. I stand by that.' Writing on an online forum under the pseudonym RedRunswick, she wrote before the 2023 strikes: 'This change in attitude has happened because of a concerted organising effort among lefties, and we have pushed the BMA to a slightly more militant position.' When asked if the strikes would 'bring the NHS to its knees', she said: 'We never bring the NHS to its knees, we always leave safe care, emergency critical care is always provided.' She added: 'Our […] repeated overwhelming mandates for strike action show that doctors are fed up of receiving repeated real terms pay cuts. 'Doctors are still starting on less than £18 an hour. I've been qualified over six years, I'm regularly looking after seven or eight wards overnight by myself. I will be the only person with any degree of advanced life support training. I'm earning less than £24 an hour. 'The people who are doing brain surgery at 3am, covering the most critically unwell people, less than £34 an hour. You would pay a plumber more. It is not unreasonable for us to ask for our pay cuts to be reversed.' Runswick's father, Alan, was a member of the Public and Commercial Services Union and also vice-chairman of the Wallasey constituency Labour Party's membership team.


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
'Doctors must think before downing stethoscopes - strike would be self harm'
Sympathising with striking workers is in my DNA, so I hope that England's hospital doctors think again before downing their stethoscopes. This is because Wes Streeting has already won the battle for the public's hearts and minds. With recent average pay rises totalling 28.9 per cent – the Health Secretary authorising 22.3 per cent over two years to settle a dispute inherited from the Tories, then this year's inflation-beating 5.4 per cent – have transformed the mood. We could all agree these hard-working, skilled and stressed life-savers are worth even more. But with the NHS finally getting back on its feet, waiting lists falling from Conservative record highs, patients wouldn't be voicing solidarity on picket lines should five days of walkouts start on July 25. Public support for the doctors has collapsed ahead of talks between Streeting and their British Medical Association trade union. New polling finding previously strong approval for industrial action by what are now called resident doctors halving from 52 per cent a year ago to just 26 per cent . As surveyor Ipsos's senior director Gideon Skinner opined, these would be the first doctors' strikes for some years without broad-based support from the public, with Labour voters among them. Pats on the back don't pay bills and muscle is key in disputes, but while participating medics voted overwhelmingly to strike in 2025 (90 per cent) as they did in 2023 (98 per cent), ballot turnout dropping to 55 per cent from 77 per cent signalled some queasiness on the wards. Perhaps their BMA resident doctors' committee co-chair Dr Ross Nieuwoudt was carried away when he suggested 'people are excited to go again', later clarifying docs were 'energised' to strike. How much their living standards are down since 2008 is disputed, the BMA claiming a painful 29 per cent while the Nuffield Trust puts it at a smaller 5 per cent. Still, whichever financial calculation is accepted, doctors have a case as do millions of other workers punished by what the TUC – which the BMA is not affiliated to – billed as the Tory worst wages squeeze since the Napoleonic era. The health and political calculations the BMA must also consider are whether squandering bedside trust and the respect are prices these doctors are prepared to pay in a dispute they could lose industrially as well as publicly. Streeting's up for the fight. Are they? The best outcome for patients would be no strikes followed by an agreed independent review to improve earnings long-term. Wages, jobs and lives are in the balance.