Tags: meningitis | united kingdom | uk | deaths | nightclub | spread

About the UK's Deadly Meningitis Outbreak

Healthcare workers in UK in masks outside hospital
(AFP)

Thursday, 19 March 2026 09:51 AM EDT

UK health authorities are probing 27 cases linked to a deadly meningitis outbreak believed to have spread at a nightclub in southeast England.

Here's everything we know about the disease and the outbreak.

First a primer: Meningitis is a potentially deadly infection causing the inflammation of the brain or spinal cord linings, which can lead to sepsis.

Bacterial meningitis, as seen in this outbreak, is rarer and deadlier than the viral type.

Initial symptoms of meningitis mimic a host of other diseases and include headache, fever, drowsiness and a stiff neck.

Another sign can be a rash, and the disease can progress rapidly.

"It is certainly not as infective as say flu or COVID-19, and requires often fairly prolonged close contact before transmission takes place," said Andrew Lee, Professor of Public Health at the University of Sheffield.

It can spread through close contact like kissing or the sharing of vapes or drinks.

More than 2 million people get meningitis worldwide each year, according to a tracker by the Meningitis Research Foundation — 80% of them in developing countries.

Outbreaks among university students have been particularly common in the West.

Meningococcal disease is a rare but serious illness caused by the meningococcal bacteria, which can result in meningitis.

It is usually spread by the people who carry the bacteria in the back of their throat or nose but don't develop any symptoms.

"Between 10-24% of the population unknowingly carry this germ at the back of their throats usually without any harm," said Lee.

There are multiple strains of the bacteria. In this outbreak, at least nine of the confirmed cases are of group B meningococcal disease (MenB) — the most common in the UK.

The epicenter of this outbreak is believed to be Club Chemistry in Canterbury, according to Health Secretary Wes Streeting. At least 10 of the confirmed cases went to the nightclub between March 5-7.

The outbreak has been described as "unprecedented" by Streeting.

At least 27 cases were being probed as of Thursday, with 15 confirmed. That figure has risen rapidly in the last week, with the first case reported on Friday, March 13.

There have also been two deaths.

"The risk of transmission and further cases is usually highest in the first week after contact with a case and the probability rapidly decreases afterwards," Lee said.

Many of those affected are University of Kent students. There have also been cases in four Kent schools and a London higher education institute.

The local authority was unable to confirm whether the outbreak had been contained as of Thursday.

Health experts point to the unusual speed and spread of the outbreak in a short timeframe.

In the U.K., meningitis tends to occur in small clusters.

"In my 35 years working in medicine, in healthcare and hospitals, this is the most cases I've seen in a single weekend with this type of infection," UK Health Security Agency head Susan Hopkins said.

"This looks like a superspreader event, with ongoing spread within the halls of residence in the universities," Hopkins added.

The UKHSA was alerted to the first case on March 13, and began tracing contacts. France informed U.K. authorities on March 14 of one person who had been at the university and was hospitalised in France.

Samples collected from patients are being analysed in the laboratory, which could give a better picture about the strain and why the infection has been more invasive.

Health authorities are racing to identify close contacts of those who were ill, and have set up multiple health clinics in Canterbury distributing antibiotics.

U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer urged anyone at the nightclub on the weekend of the outbreak to seek antibiotics to help halt the spread of the disease.

For the general U.K. public, "the overall risk remains very low," said Zina Alfahl from the University of Galway's School of Medicine.

Bacterial meningitis usually needs to be treated in the hospital.

It can be prevented through vaccines. The University of Kent has rolled out a targeted vaccination program to provide 5,000 jabs to students on campus.

While vaccines against some meningitis strains are administered routinely to children in the U.K., the shot against MenB has only been part of the immunization schedule since 2015 — when the U.K. became the first country in the world to add the jab to its program.

As people rush to buy vaccines in response to the outbreak, health minister Streeting said it was "not necessary."

© AFP 2026


Health-News
UK health authorities are probing 27 cases linked to a deadly meningitis outbreak believed to have spread at a nightclub in southeast England. Here's everything we know about the disease and the outbreak: WHAT IS MENINGITIS? Meningitis is a potentially deadly infection causing...
meningitis, united kingdom, uk, deaths, nightclub, spread
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2026-51-19
Thursday, 19 March 2026 09:51 AM
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