the meningococcal conjugate vaccine, for groups a, c, w and y, for children and adults was introduced in canada in 2005, with each province and territory managing its own publicly-funded vaccination program. kathryn talks about kids in ontario receiving the conjugate vaccine at age 12, with guardian consent, but says that what isn’t widely understood is that by the time they enter university or college, that vaccine is no longer as effective and they need a booster.
“it’s also a little murky in that there’s not one vaccine given. there’s a different vaccine for the strain c that’s given to babies,” she says, noting that the lethal meningitis b strain is most prevalent in canada because the vaccine for it has never been part of the public vaccination schedule, and it’s only recommended in the event of an outbreak. many people may not even be aware of meningitis b or know that it is the most prevalent.
now, meningitis b is the most recent vaccine available, but it currently is not provided by public health in canada with a couple of exceptions in nova scotia for first year university and college students and prince edward island for all post-secondary students.
kathryn and her board members have launched a letter writing campaign to post-secondary institutions to be a part of policy change that would promote students entering their first year to have the meningitis b vaccine and a booster for the conjugated a, c, w, y.