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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Jessica Murray Social affairs correspondent

Nurseries in England bring in Covid-style protocols as measles cases rise

A doctor giving a child an injection
Measles vaccine uptake is low in some parts of England, including Liverpool, where a child has died from the disease. Photograph: Alek Zotoff/Getty Images

Parents and experts have voiced alarm over rising measles cases, with nurseries bringing in Covid-style isolation protocols to clamp down on outbreaks.

There have been more than 500 confirmed cases in England in 2025, the majority in young children. A child died at Alder Hey hospital in Liverpool on Sunday after contracting the infectious disease.

With cases increasing and vaccine uptake in some parts of the country worryingly low, nurseries are bringing back infection control measures last used during the pandemic to keep children safe and ease parents’ fears.

Adam Rowles’ two-year-old daughter attends a nursery in south-east London that recently had four cases of measles. Although his daughter is fully vaccinated, his six-month-old son is due to start attending the nursery before his first birthday, when he would be eligible for his first measles jab.

Rowles said: “It’s alarming, isn’t it? Because it’s something that you think has been eradicated, and we don’t have to worry about any more, but then all of a sudden here we are. It’s just baffling.”

He has asked about postponing his son’s nursery place until he is vaccinated but was told that would cost him his place. The nursery said it had implemented strict protocols, such as dividing up walking and nonwalking babies to reduce the spread of infection and had brought back “Covid levels of cleaning”.

“We felt slightly more at ease, but still not fully at ease,” said Rowles. “It made what seemed really bad and quite scary, still scary but less so. We’re basically just going to have to hope for the best for five months. And we have grandparents on hand to help if we have to take him out of there, if it comes to that.”

Melanie Pilcher of the Early Years Alliance, which represents providers, said nurseries were equipped to deal with outbreaks after the Covid pandemic and were starting to bring back similar infection control procedures. “They’re using all those good hygiene practices, staff have got PPE, they’ve got aprons, gloves, some settings still keep masks,” she said. “They’re doing everything they can, while obviously not scaring the children either.

“Thanks to Covid, we got very savvy at knowing what we needed to do in the case of a very serious illness occurring like this. It is a very real and present danger.”

Pilcher said many nurseries were asking whether they could turn away unvaccinated children: “They can’t, and it wouldn’t be right to turn children away because it is a parental choice at the end of the day, and we have to respect that.”

Experts said measles vaccine uptake had decreased in part because of misinformation online, missed appointments in the pandemic and limited access to GP appointments

Helen Bedford, a professor of children’s health at UCL, said inequality driven by poverty was the key underlying issue. “People talk about vaccine hesitancy and true, people do have questions, they have concerns. But the biggest problem really is about access. Under-immunisation goes hand in hand with poverty,” she said.

Parents being unable to take time off work to get their child to a vaccination appointment, or unable to afford the transport to get there, were regularly cited as reasons why children had not had both doses of the measles, mumps and rubella jab.

Prof Matt Ashton, the director of public health for Liverpool, where measles vaccine uptake is 73% compared with 84% across England, said: “Measles is a disease people are used to not seeing. And people have complex, difficult lives, aligned to poverty and deprivation.

“They are time-poor, often working really hard just to put food on the table. So that means they don’t prioritise a health intervention for a disease they don’t think is an issue.”

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Dr Chris Bird, a paediatric emergency medicine consultant at Birmingham children’s hospital, has treated a number of measles patients, particularly during an outbreak of about 450 cases last year.

“That’s a huge number, and a lot of my colleagues had never seen measles before. We had almost elimination status in the UK just before Covid,” he said. “It’s also quite difficult to spot because the symptoms are very non-specific until the rash appears at day four.

“Measles is 10 times more infectious than flu or Covid, so you only have to have a child sitting in a busy waiting room for 15 minutes and then you’ve got a potential spread.”

He said he was increasingly speaking to families who had not had their children vaccinated, often for “personal reasons”.

Dr Qasim Malik, a paediatric registrar and member of the British Islamic Medical Association (Bima), said a more targeted approach toward different communities was needed to boost vaccine uptake. “We’re often talking about people who probably have been traditionally excluded from accessing healthcare,” he said. “For instance, the marginalisation of asylum seekers and refugees means they’re more reluctant to seek out healthcare for their children.

“At Bima, we use inclusive language sensitive to the Muslim community, such as considering if there is gelatine in the vaccine, for instance, whether that is affecting uptake and what alternatives are available. We need less demonisation and a kinder approach when looking at these issues by building relationships and looking at vaccine hesitancy alongside other issues such as lack of access to food and adequate housing.”

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