GPs warn they are in ‘danger of being ‘overwhelmed’ by Strep A
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GP practices are begging parents who are worried their child may have Strep A to think twice before demanding appointments, MailOnline can reveal.
One surgery in Oxfordshire warned it is ‘in danger of being overwhelmed’ amid the ongoing surge in kids falling ill with seasonal viruses and bugs.
It is now guiding concerned parents to an online advice page that attempts to calm growing fears and ease pressures by listing key signs youngsters could be seriously ill and need to be seen immediately.
Similar panic unfolding across the nation has been seen in struggling A&E units and NHS 111 call centres, which have been swamped by the ‘worried well’.
Staff warned casualty units had become a ‘dangerous place’ due to ‘huge numbers’ seeking reassurance and that seriously ill cases could be missed.
It comes as a five-year-old became the ninth child in the UK to die from the usually-harmless bug. Stella-Lily McCorkindale, from Belfast in Northern Ireland, suffered a life-threatening complication.
Five-year-old Stella-Lily McCorkindale, of Northern Ireland, developed a life-threatening complication of the usually-harmless bug
This map shows rates of invasive Group A Streptococcal disease (iGAS), a serious form of Strep A infection, in England’s regions. Rates are cases per 100,000 people with the outbreak highest in Yorkshire and the Humber and lowest in the East of England
The message from the GP clinic, seen by MailOnline, read: ‘We are in danger of being overwhelmed and unable to offer appointments to all the patients we need to.
‘However we understand it’s difficult to know when you or your child needs to see a doctor so to help with this, if you are concerned about a viral infection please look at this helpful advice before contacting the surgery.’
Doctors union, the British Medical Association (BMA), said NHS England must start directing patients to only NHS 111 initially to ensure GPs are not overwhelmed.
Dr Kieran Sharrock, the BMA’s acting chair of GPC England, said: ‘GPs are seeing an increase in demand about Strep A, but what mustn’t happen is that general practice gets overwhelmed.’
‘We are already working at capacity, with too few doctors, and need to make sure that we remain available for other patients who need us.’
He added the NHS England should be directing patients to NHS 111, who can advise parents if they need to book a GP appointment.
‘To help us, NHS England should ensure concerned patients are initially signposted to contact NHS 111, so that they are given the right advice or directed to the most appropriate service if necessary, while allowing GP practices to continue delivering care to those patients who need them most.’
Current national health advice for England on Strep A advises parent to contact their GP or NHS 111 if their child is showing signs of becoming unwell with the bacterial infection.
It comes as GPs are already juggling huge pressures, with millions of patients unable to get an appointment when they want to.
Labour analysis, released this week, found 5million people a month are unable to book a GP appointment when they want one with the number doubling in a year.
Millions more are left waiting over a month to be seen, potentially forcing them to overcrowded A&Es or leaving them at risk of serious diseases being diagnosed too late.
Calls to direct more parents worried about Strep A to NHS 111 comes as call handlers warn they are also under pressure from a wave of worried families.
One said the pressure over the weekend had made it feel like they were ‘working in a sweatshop’, with managers more interested in hitting targets for 111 calls answered rather than if patient concerns were being addressed.
The telephone and online service is designed to minimise unnecessary calls to 999 or A&E attendances by giving people quick medical advice on if an issue needs urgent medical attention.
But one call handler told The Independent: ‘The pressure is too high, we take calls after calls, it’s a never-ending process.
‘Patients are not happy because they do not receive the callbacks on time they keep calling back.
‘It’s a sweatshop… [Managers] only care about the number of calls we have taken per hour and the focus on the duration of the calls. Patient safety is out of the window… it is completely ignored.’
The BMA have said NHS England must ‘urgently’ provide NHS 111 with extra capacity to take on additional callers and prevent patients giving up and turning to other parts of the health service,
Some parents, after failing to get through on NHS 111 have instead resorted to turning up directly to A&E with sick children,
One senior accident and emergency leader told the Health Service Journal: ‘Huge numbers of “worried well” makes accident and emergency a much more dangerous place.
‘[There is a] much greater chance we would miss one seriously unwell child when we are wading through a six-hour queue of viral, but otherwise well, kids.’
It comes as Stella-Lily’s father Robert paid a heartfelt tribute to his daughter. He said if well wishes had worked, his five-year-old daughter would have ‘walked out of that hospital holding her daddy’s hand’.
Pupils at her school have already been offered antibiotics as part of a drive to stop other kids becoming ill. Entire year groups in schools battling outbreaks are being recommended the drugs.
In a Facebook post addressing Stella-Lily’s death, Mr McCorkindale said: ‘I hope you all find the time to read this, I don’t have the strength to do a video.
‘First of all I want to thank everyone of you from the bottom of my heart.
‘If prayers, thoughts, feelings and love could have worked, she would have walked out of that hospital holding her daddy’s hand.
‘So from me and Stella-Lily, thanks all of you for all you kind prayers and thoughts and feelings we felt everyone, words can’t express our gratitude.’
Mr McCorkindale added that he ‘loved every minute’ he spent with his daughter, reminiscing about their scooter and bike rides.
He added: ‘To everyone from Belfast to Northern Ireland to her family in Canada thank you all for every thought.
‘Stella-Lily felt them all.’
Stella-Lily’s school, the Black Mountain Primary School, spoke of its ‘tragic loss’ and said ‘the thoughts of the entire school are with the pupil’s family and friends at this difficult time’.
Robert McCorkindale, her father (right), said: ‘To everyone from Belfast to Northern Ireland to her family in Canada thank you all for every thought. Stella-Lily felt them all’
In a social media post, it said: ‘Sadly, the governors, staff and students of Black Mountain Primary School have been informed of the untimely passing of one of our P2 pupils, Stella-Lily McCorkindale.
‘This is a tragic loss to the Black Mountain Primary School family and our school community, and the thoughts of the entire school are with the Stella-Lily’s family and friends at this sad and difficult time.
‘Stella-Lily was a very bright and talented little girl and very popular with both staff and children and will be greatly missed by everyone at school.
‘To assist in supporting our pupils and staff at this sad time, additional trained staff from the Education Authority Critical Incident Response Team have been engaged and will be providing support to the school.
‘We recognise that this news may cause worry amongst our school community and we want to reassure parents that we continue to work closely with the Public Health Agency at this time.’
Northern Ireland’s Public Health Agency issued a letter to parents of pupils in primary one to three — children aged five to eight — informing them that Stella-Lily had been diagnosed with severe Strep A.
The youngsters were advised to go to a clinic for a preventative course of antibiotics.
Eight other children have so far died from the bacteria, seven in England and one in Wales, since September.
Health officials have admitted this winter’s death toll, although low, is higher than expected.
Strep A usually only causes mild symptoms such as a sore throat and a fever. But, it can also lead to scarlet fever and impetigo.
In exceptionally rare cases, the bug can penetrate deeper into the body and cause life-threatening problems such as sepsis. This is known as iGAS, or invasive Group A Streptococcal.
The bacterial infection, carried by millions of people at any one time, is treatable with antibiotics, however.
UK Health Security Agency data shows cases of iGAS are nearly five times higher than the pre-pandemic average.
Separately, Brackenagh West Primary School in Kilkeel, County Down, said dozens of its pupils have Strep A.
Health officials said clusters of scarlet fever have also been reported at schools and nurseries in Antrim, Belfast, Bangor and Craigavon.
And one school in Hull, St Vincent’s Voluntary Catholic Academy, told parents on Friday that it would close for a deep clean after a group of children fell ill with scarlet fever.
Part of the problem is that the symptoms of a Strep A infection, a sore throat and a fever, are the same as number of common winter viruses.
But there are concerns that a ‘tripledemic’ of these viruses, which are in high circulation at the moment, could be weakening children’s immune systems and leaving them vulnerable to a more severe Step A infection.
This is because battling two infections at the same time, or having tissues damaged by one as the other sets in, can weaken the immune system.
Experts also suspect a general lower immunity to seasonal bugs stemming from the Covid lockdowns as well as increased handwashing and mask wearing could also be playing a part.
Professor Adam Finn, a paediatrician at the University of Bristol, said experts don’t completely understand why cases of iGAS are higher than usual.
UKHSA data shows cases of iGAS are nearly five times higher than the pre-pandemic average.
However, he claimed the potential combination of viral and bacterial infections is one possibility.
Professor Finn, who advised the Government during the Covid pandemic, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘It may be directly because there was less Group A Strep around and so there’s less immunity to that organism.
‘But it’s also likely to be related to all the viral infections we’re currently seeing.’
He added that viral infections, like RSV, flu, and Covid, do enable these bacteria to become more virulent.
Professor Finn said: ‘My colleagues at the UKHSA, who have more information about these individual cases, are telling me they are finding a variety of different viruses in these children.
‘Now of course a lot of children have got viruses at the moment anyway so I can’t be sure that this is a casual relationship.
‘But it is an association and I think it is quite likely to be related.’
Professor Paul Hunter, a public health expert at the University of East Anglia, also told MailOnline it was ‘absolutely the case’ that a viral infection could leave people vulnerable to a subsequent bacterial disease.
He said: ‘We know that most of the deaths following influenza are actually caused by bacteria that the flu has ‘let in’.
‘Many of such events are probably not that the person then catches a Group A Strep after flu but that if they are already carrying a Strep, and that is not rare, then the flu can damage the lining of the airways to allow the strep to go virulent.’
Professor Hunter urged people to take up the flu vaccine if offered to help protect both themselves and others.
A free nasal vaccine for youngsters aged two-to-three-years-of-age and all primary school children is available on the NHS.
Another theory behind the current surge is that there is less immunity to Strep A due to children not being exposed to the bug during the Covid lockdowns.
This was highlighted today by Health Secretary Steve Barclay in the House of Commons today.
Responding to questions he said: ‘We believe this is due to lower exposure during the pandemic which has then (meant) lower immunity.’
There are also fears antibiotics critical in to stopping a Strep A infection in its tracks could be in short supply.
While Downing Street has insisted there is no shortage of antibiotic used to help children fend off the infection pharmacists say they are struggling to secure supplies.
Pharmacists told MailOnline the ongoing shortages, which could rumble on until into 2023, were ‘heartbreaking’ with parents scrambling to find the drugs being turned away due to a lack of supplies.
MailOnline revealed earlier this week that UK medicine suppliers have reported three antibiotics — including one of the first-line options for Strep A — are now in short supply.
Under-18s who become ill should get phenoxymethylpenicillin, or Penicillin V under NHS guidelines.
But supplies of one type of this drug, manufactured by the firm Accord, are running low, according to MIMS, an online tracker used by healthcare professionals.
Shortages are expected to last until December 28.
Shortages of alternative clarithromycin, mainly used for children and adults with a penicillin allergy, are predicted to last until the New Year.
Meanwhile, child-specific formulations of amoxicillin which is also used to treat chest and ear infections, are also on the list.
Today, Dr Leyla Hannbeck, chief executive of the Association of Independent Multiple Pharmacies, said antibiotics were ‘flying off the shelves’ due to the number of prescriptions being issued.
Shortages comes just as GPs have been told to be ready to dish out antibiotics to youngsters showing even slight Strep A symptoms as part of a drive to stop the bug early — when it’s most treatable.
Antibiotics are main tool medics can lean use to help a child battling a severe Strep A infection, unlike some other bacterial infections which have a vaccine.
Professor Finn, one of the Government’s top vaccine advisors has now called for a Strep A jab to be developed to maximise children’s odds of beating the infection before it makes them seriously ill.
He said the infection had been neglected in terms of vaccine development.
‘We don’t see so much of it as we did historically it’s something that we do see quite frequently in little bursts as the years go by,’ he said.
‘There is a desperate need to make a vaccine against this bug. It’s a very neglected bug it causes a lot of problems, the most notable of which is rheumatic fever which is a problem in many children in poor countries.’
Researchers have been trying to create a vaccine for Strep A decades, with the bacterial infection still kills up to 500,000 people across the world each year.
The stall in jab development has been partly attributed to a ban on human trials of Strep A vaccines in 1979 in the US. This was linked to trial of a jab that allegedly gave two children rheumatic fever, though this is disputed by some experts.
However, the consequences are not, with research on a Step A vaccine slowing to a crawl with the US ban was only being lifted in 2006.
An additional factor has been the success of antibiotics in treating Strep A infections.
Since most cases of the infection can be treated with relatively cheap drugs, some argue pharmaceutical companies haven’t been motivated to invest in a potential jab.