Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Comment

I am one of the many London parents who haven’t vaccinated their children against measles – let me explain

A new outbreak of measles is spreading across north London, and it’s a wake-up call to all mums like me who didn’t give the MMR vaccines to our children, says Charlotte Cripps

‘Big measles outbreak’ affecting children under 10 confirmed in London

I was always on track with both my children’s childhood NHS vaccination schedules – that’s until they reached their first birthdays. Until then, like many mums, I was just a little nervous about my little eight-week-old baby being jabbed in the thigh by a nurse with their first doses of the six-in-one vaccine, Rotavirus, and MenB vaccine because they cried so much and didn’t understand what I was doing to them.

After each immunisation was recorded in their red plastic medical book, though, I took a deep sigh of relief. I was told to give them Calpol if they developed a mild fever, irritability, or were harder to settle – and to come back at 12 and 16 weeks for the second or third doses, plus the pneumococcal vaccine. No problem.

I was so grateful they were protected against serious illnesses such as polio, tetanus, diphtheria, and meningitis. But when it got to the next phase of vaccines, when they turned one year old, I wasn’t so sure. Like many parents, when it came to giving them the standard two-dose MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccine, which has, since January, been replaced by the MMRV (also with varicella/chickenpox) for added protection against chickenpox, I felt like I needed more information.

So, I turned it down. Yes – that is right. I wanted to look into other options – the single-dose jab. I felt like I wanted to research it properly. People condemned me for questioning the NHS protocol and worrying about, as I saw it, “overloading their systems”, but it felt like my prerogative to get it done privately in a more bespoke way if I wanted to.

Vaccine hindsight: Charlotte saw the second round of her daughters’ vaccinations as potentially ‘overloading their systems’
Vaccine hindsight: Charlotte saw the second round of her daughters’ vaccinations as potentially ‘overloading their systems’ (Charlotte Cripps)

I knew the risks, I knew they needed to be immunised against measles and rubella. Not just for them, but for other children too. And, it turns out, I was right to be worried. As we are seeing, there is now a dangerous measles outbreak in north east London, mostly affecting unvaccinated children under 10 in schools and pre-school day care, with some being hospitalised – and it’s being labelled as “fast-spreading”.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) claims to have found 34 laboratory-confirmed measles cases in Enfield, and it’s highly infectious. The viral illness can spread very easily among people who are not fully vaccinated – like my children, now nine and seven.

And, according to reports in The Sunday Times, more than 60 suspected cases of measles in the area have been reported by seven schools and a nursery. A message posted on the NHS Ordnance Unity Centre for Health GP surgery said: “During this recent outbreak, one in five children have been hospitalised due to measles and all of them had not been fully immunised.”

It warned parents to make sure their children are up to date with all their immunisations. It sent shockwaves through some of my community of vegan mums, who, like me, have a gaping hole in our kids’ medical records.

The spots of the measles rash, which are not usually itchy, are sometimes raised and join together to form blotchy patches
The spots of the measles rash, which are not usually itchy, are sometimes raised and join together to form blotchy patches (Alamy/PA)

While measles normally clears up within seven to 10 days, with symptoms including a high fever, coughing, sneezing and a blotchy red or brown rash, it can also lead to pneumonia, meningitis, blindness and seizures. About one in 15 people with measles can become seriously ill.

Babies, younger children, and of course, pregnant women and those with a weakened immune system, including the elderly, are also at increased risk. So why, if I know all of this to be true, do I find myself in the situation of my children not being immunised?

I’m not alone in having missed the measles jabs. Just 64.3 per cent of five-year-olds in Enfield received both doses of the MMR vaccine in 2024/25 – reportedly one of the lowest rates in the UK.

Meanwhile, across the UK, recent figures reveal that children being given their first MMR jab in England fell from 91.9 per cent in 2015 to 2016 to 88.9 per cent in 2024 to 2025.

The number of five-year-olds who have had a second MMR vaccine also fell from 88.2 per cent in 2015-16 to 83.7 per cent in 2024-25. And the uptake of second MMR jabs for five-year-olds has dropped significantly from 88.2 per cent in 2015 to 2016 to 83.7 per cent in 2024-25.

Measles can be very contagious, so it’s important to seek medical attention
Measles can be very contagious, so it’s important to seek medical attention (Alamy/PA)

The UK is now one of six countries in Europe and central Asia that the WHO says are no longer measles-free, the others being Spain, Austria, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan.

My daughters are now vulnerable to catching it – and I’m ashamed to say, passing it on – as measles ravages London. It’s clearly not because I don’t care about them – although no doubt many will accuse me of being neglectful, ignorant, and selfish – even a “murderer”. But it was always my intention to get my children vaccinated against measles.

I just wanted to make my own choices on how it was administered. It’s a personal choice, surely – and it would cost me £120 per jab. I was booked into BabyJabs in east London, a children’s vaccination clinic that offers a bespoke, tailor-made immunisation plan for children. Surely it’s better to respect parents’ concerns – and get kids vaccinated in the way they want them to be vaccinated – than to leave them unsupported and likely to back out of them.

The injections that were unlicensed in the UK, but licensed by the WHO, could be prescribed by a GP – that’s until last year, when, according to the BabyJabs website, “the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulator Agency (MHRA) announced that it would no longer permit the importation of the single measles vaccine in the UK”.

I tried to get a single dose shot of the measles jab for my children so as not to overload their systems
I tried to get a single dose shot of the measles jab for my children so as not to overload their systems (Getty/iStock)

But I missed the boat. When Covid hit in 2020 and 2021 – and we were all in lockdown – I had to cancel my appointment. I never got around to getting my children inoculated against measles. I am embarrassed to say that I actually forgot.

Since hearing the worrying news that there is a measles outbreak that could pose real danger, I’ve been calling other private clinics, which also claim to no longer do single-dose jabs, citing “a national shortage”.

I can’t get the single dose anywhere. My only option is now to get the MMR jab privately, if I don’t want the added chickenpox overload. It’s all very well to scream at me that the medical establishment knows best, and I should have had the MMR years ago, but I was also someone who got spooked with the rollout of the Covid-19 vaccine.

While I went to every Covid jab appointment (I am not anti-vax!), knowing the vaccines saved lives and lessened symptoms for at-risk groups and older people during the pandemic, including my elderly dad, I was still too anxious to give it to my children, who I saw as low risk from Covid.

Like many others, I lost confidence in the government at the time. Even the former prime minister Boris Johnson was flouting his own lockdown rules and rightly, or wrongly, this bled into everything.

The anxiety I and many others felt at that time, meant a whole generation has now become vaccine sceptic, from trendy clean-eating “crunchy mums” to whole ethnic groups. According to research carried out by the University of Bristol and King’s College London in 2021, people from Bame groups (25 per cent) were twice as likely as white people (13 per cent) to report believing (wrongly) that the only reason a coronavirus vaccine was being developed is to make money for Big Pharma.

Many of us were lulled into conspiracy theories online, which included misinformation about life-saving vaccines. This misinformation persists, with a staggering third of Reform UK’s council leaders now reportedly expressing vaccine-sceptic views. And despite sometimes insisting he is “not anti-vaccine”, RFK Jr, the head of the US Department of Health and Human Services,has repeatedly questioned the safety and testing of vaccines in public statements and interviews, including claims about Covid-19 vaccines and childhood vaccines that public health experts say are unsupported by scientific evidence.

I got caught up in some of the fake news madness myself – and I realise now how ridiculous, and dangerous, that was.

Former prime minister Boris Johnson wanted to be injected with Covid on TV to show it did not pose a threat, an official inquiry was told
Former prime minister Boris Johnson wanted to be injected with Covid on TV to show it did not pose a threat, an official inquiry was told (PA)

As a mum, I felt incapable of sitting back and just ignoring it. I wanted to make triple-sure I did everything in my power to vaccinate my kids safely, even if I was being overly paranoid. But like many parents erring on the side of caution, I was now looking for single shots.

I now realise the danger of not vaccinating my children, for them and other children, and understand that I need to just get on with it. But even that is proving to be difficult. According to the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, issues such as difficulty booking appointments, transport problems and a lack of consistency in seeing the same GP have made people more hesitant to follow the vaccination schedules.

This latest measles outbreak, however, tells me there's only one thing left to do. I’m booking my kids for their MMRV jabs. It might not be perfect, but it’s better late than never.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in