Kent students to get vaccines during 'unprecedented' meningitis outbreakpublished at 19:24 GMT 17 March
Freya Scott-Turner
Live reporter
The Health Secretary Wes Streeting has announced new measures to tackle what he calls the "unprecedented outbreak" of meningitis in Kent.
Two young people have died, and 13 others have been put in hospital.
Four of the meningitis cases have been confirmed as Meningitis B, or MenB - a serious bacterial form of the illness. Routine vaccination of babies for MenB was only rolled out in 2015, meaning teenagers and young adults are unlikely to have had a jab.
A targeted vaccination programme will be rolled out for students in halls of residence at the University of Kent - where one of those who died was a student - Streeting told the House of Commons.
The general eligibility of the vaccination for Meningitis B is also going to be reviewed.
On the ground in Kent, four schools have confirmed cases, St Patrick's Day events have been cancelled, and demand for the jab has surged at pharmacies offering it privately.
The mother of a restaurant worker, currently in hospital with meningitis, has thanked her daughter's flatmate for "literally saving her life" after she collapsed. While a nurse treating some of those affected says that you can "feel the anxiety off everyone" in the area.
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