In Reading, a junior school pupil has been diagnosed with the fourth case of meningitis amidst an outbreak that led to the death of one child. This pupil is part of a group of students who contracted Meningitis B (MenB), including Lewis Waters from The Henley College in Oxfordshire, who passed away recently.
Additionally, two more individuals, students at Reading Blue Coat School and Highdown Secondary School and Sixth Form Centre, are receiving treatment for the infection. Dr. Rachel Mearkle, a health protection consultant at the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), confirmed the fourth case of meningococcal disease in Reading, linked to the same social network as the other cases.
The affected individual, a pupil at Westwood Farm Junior School, whose age remains undisclosed, is on the path to recovery. Dr. Mearkle reassured that the risk to the general public is low, highlighting that this case is unrelated to incidents in Kent or Dorset.
Lewis Waters, a sixth form pupil, tragically succumbed to meningitis and sepsis. His father, Sean, expressed deep sorrow over the loss, describing Lewis as funny, sociable, and kind-hearted.
These recent meningitis cases in Reading come after a significant outbreak in Kent that resulted in two fatalities and multiple hospitalizations. Juliette Kenny, an 18-year-old student at Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School in Faversham, and an unnamed 21-year-old University of Kent student were among the casualties of the Kent outbreak in March.
Meningitis can affect individuals of all ages, with babies, young children, teenagers, and university students at higher risk due to close contact in educational settings and shared accommodations. Symptoms can manifest suddenly and vary, including high temperature, severe headache, vomiting, confusion, and a rash that does not fade under pressure, among others.
