Doctors warn new students to be wary of meningitis risk

Parents are being urged to ensure their student children don’t confuse covid-19 with other killer diseases such as meningitis. The message, from charity Meningitis Now, comes as many of the nation’s teenagers prepare to leave home for university for the first time.

19-year-old year Ben de Souza came close to losing his life when he contracted meningitis

With as many as half a million students setting up home, often in halls of residence, in the coming months, many universities will be expecting the usual health issues such as “Freshers’ Flu” and hangovers to be complicated by coronavirus and all will be taking measures to help prevent it.

“But what about meningitis?” says Dr Tom Nutt, the CEO at Meningitis Now.

“The harsh reality is that some students will contract meningitis while at Uni this autumn. It will be too easy to put a headache and feeling unwell down to covid-19 and self-isolate. While this is the correct response for covid-19, it could be disastrous if the illness is meningitis.

“When meningitis strikes it does so quickly and any delay in diagnosis or treatment can cost lives.

“Our message to parents as they battle with the uncertainties of university starting dates, online tutorials and living arrangements is to be certain about meningitis and to ensure that their children are aware of the signs and symptoms of meningitis, and that if they are feeling unwell they shouldn’t simply assume it’s covid-19 or a hangover and that they should seek medical help immediately by calling NHS 111 or their GP.”

Ben de Souza, a 19-year-old student at the University of Portsmouth, knows how quickly meningitis can strike having contracted meningococcal B in November 2019. De Souza was just one month into college when he became unwell, disorientated, and confused. He was told that it was a hangover. De Souza, who had been given the MenACWY vaccine, had contracted MenB – a strain of the disease he was not vaccinated against.

The quick thinking and speedy action of his flatmates saved his life.

“Being told that our son was the sickest patient in the hospital, will live with me forever,” says his mother, Arlene de Souza.

“The outcome for Ben could have been very different if he and his mates had also been dealing with the added confusion of Covid-19. Ben has been lucky.”

After making a full recovery, Ben de Souza intends to restart his university studies this autumn.

The student environment is the perfect breeding ground for diseases such as meningitis, as large groups of people start to cohabit and mix for the first time – some of whom will unknowingly be carrying the bug that causes this disease. This is further exacerbated by the fact that a quarter of 15- to 24-year-olds carry meningococcal bacteria in the back of their throats, compared to 1 in 10 of the general population.

While many students going to university or college this year are likely to have been protected against MenACWY, having received the vaccine at school, up to half a million people aged up to the age of 25 may have missed this important jab, and very few will have been vaccinated against MenB – a strain that causes most cases of bacterial meningitis in the UK.


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News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London. Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com
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