A mother’s plea: vaccinate your kids.
Just weeks after watching their newborn son Hugo nearly die from a combination of enterovirus meningitis and bacterial meningitis/meningococcal B, Women’s Health Editor Felicity Harley and her husband, AFL premiership captain Tom Harley are pleading with parents to vaccinate their children.
Their five-week-old son was one week away from being old enough to receive his vaccinations when he was rushed to hospital on Easter Sunday with a high temperature.
Doctors started him on intravenous antibiotics as they awaited test results for suspected enterovirus meningitis.
“That was definitely enough to explain why he was so sick, so we could have left it at that,” Paediatrician Dr Emily Horsley told the Herald Sun.
Viral meningitis is the inflammation of the meninges — the soft tissue membranes which cover the brain and spinal cord underneath the skull and spinal column.
But further tests including two lumbar punctures found that baby Hugo was also fighting the bacterial meningitis, meningococcal B.
Bacterial meningitis is fatal in approximately 50 per cent of cases and accounts for around 170,000 deaths around the world each year.
Former Geelong captain and now Sydney Swans general manager, Tom Harley, told The Herald Sun it was tough. “I tried to stay really positive, but when you go home at midnight, you’d sit there with your own thoughts, and have your little moments by yourself,” he said.
Top Comments
My daughter had the meningococcal B vaccination yesterday. There are 2 needles given 2 months apart. The medical practice that I go to charges $125 per needle so in total it costs $250 for the vaccination. Places that are charging $500 should be ashamed for putting such a huge mark up on children's vaccinations.
Re: the vaccine that is on the schedule. It's not a vaccine against Meningococcal A, it's Meningococcal C