Was response to 'unprecedented' outbreak too slow?
What normally triggers a reg flag is when there are more than one.
Even then the alarm was not raised.
The explanation given was that the students had lived at different private addresses and so no direct link could be made.
Was valuable time lost in trying to contain this outbreak - one that is being described as "unprecedented" by experts?
But it's not just that response was delayed.
An alert could have been cascaded to local GPs to be on the look out for cases as well as other local hospitals.
An UKHSA official said they were now aware of some delays in the hospital notifying them.
One suggestion is that they were waiting for test results to come back to confirm meningitis.
Even with one case you report it. If there is two or more it's a red flag. I've not known an outbreak like this in my 40 years working in the field. " By Saturday evening it was clear something very unusual and extremely worrying was happening.
The hospital notified UKHSA they had more cases and by Sunday morning UKHSA had stood up a full scale response.
By this stage panic had set in. Around 40 999 calls were made by university students on Sunday afternoon and evening, according to sources, as people became worried about the outbreak.
Several more cases were identified, but most turned out not to be meningitis.
Students have complained about the lack of communication, as have local GPs.
And it was not until late on Sunday evening that UKHSA went public with the news of the cases.
We're totally in the dark. "
But UKHSA has defended itself.
Dr Gayatri Amirthalingam, a deputy director at the agency, says her teams have been working rapidly and tirelessly over the weekend and continue to do so
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