Following the confirmed meningitis B outbreak in Canterbury, health experts explain how the bacteria spreads, why young adults are particularly vulnerable, and what you can do to protect yourself and your family.
With a meningitis B outbreak now confirmed in Canterbury, many Kent residents are asking the same question: how does this disease actually spread? Understanding the answer could save lives — because meningitis B doesn’t behave the way most people assume.
The Silent Carriers
Here’s the part that catches most people off guard. Meningitis B isn’t mainly spread by visibly sick patients. It’s carried and transmitted by people who feel perfectly fine.
The bacterium responsible — Neisseria meningitidis — lives in the nose and throat of healthy carriers who show no symptoms whatsoever. Public Health England estimates that between 5 and 25 per cent of adolescents and young adults carry it at any given time. In shared living environments like university halls of residence, that figure can climb higher still.
Dr Shamez Ladhani, consultant epidemiologist at the UK Health Security Agency, has previously noted that meningococcal bacteria are “carried harmlessly by many people” and that “most carriers never develop disease themselves.” But they can pass it on to others who do.
How It Spreads
Meningococcal bacteria spread through close, prolonged contact. That means respiratory droplets from coughing, sneezing, or talking at close range. It also means sharing drinks, kissing, or spending extended time in crowded indoor spaces.
The bacteria don’t survive long outside the body. You can’t catch meningitis B from surfaces, door handles, or food. It requires direct person-to-person transmission — which is why environments where young people live, socialise, and study closely together create ideal conditions for the bacteria to circulate.
After exposure, the incubation period is typically between two and ten days, with most cases developing symptoms within three to five days. During that window, a newly colonised person may already be passing the bacteria to others without realising it.
Why Young Adults Are at Greater Risk
There’s a critical vaccination gap affecting today’s university-age students. The standard MenACWY vaccine offered to teenagers at age 13–14 protects against four strains of meningococcal disease — but not against strain B.
An infant MenB vaccine (Bexsero) was added to the UK immunisation schedule in 2015. But most current university students, aged roughly 18 to 21, were born before that programme started. They missed childhood MenB vaccination entirely, leaving a significant immunity gap in the very age group most likely to live in shared accommodation and socialise in close quarters.
Recognising the Symptoms
Meningitis B can deteriorate rapidly. The NHS advises watching for these warning signs:
- High fever with cold hands and feet
- Severe headache and neck stiffness
- Vomiting and sensitivity to light
- A blotchy rash that doesn’t fade when pressed with a glass
- Drowsiness, confusion, or difficulty waking
- Seizures
In babies and young children, look for a bulging fontanelle (soft spot), a high-pitched cry, and refusal to feed. Symptoms can appear in any order, and the glass test rash may not always be present — so trust your instincts. If someone is seriously unwell and getting worse, call 999.
How to Reduce Your Risk
While no preventive measure is foolproof, there are practical steps that reduce the chance of transmission:
- Avoid sharing drinks, water bottles, cutlery, or cigarettes
- Don’t share toothbrushes or lip balm
- Wash hands regularly, especially after being in crowded spaces
- If you’re a university student who hasn’t had the MenB vaccine, speak to your GP about whether catch-up vaccination is appropriate
- Ensure your teenage children have received their MenACWY booster — while it doesn’t cover strain B, it protects against other dangerous strains
Key Takeaways
- Meningitis B is mainly spread by healthy carriers who show no symptoms — not by visibly unwell patients
- Close contact transmission (respiratory droplets, shared drinks, kissing) is the primary route — surfaces and food are not a risk
- University-age students face a vaccination gap: the teenage MenACWY vaccine does not protect against strain B, and most current students missed childhood MenB vaccination
What This Means for Kent Residents
If you have children at university in Kent or they socialise regularly with students, now is the time to have a conversation about meningitis B. The UKHSA is offering preventive antibiotics and vaccination to those identified as close contacts in the Canterbury outbreak — contact your GP if you believe you or a family member may have been exposed. For anyone concerned about the vaccination gap, the MenB vaccine is available privately through most pharmacies and GP surgeries, typically costing between £100 and £200 for the full course. The NHS 111 service and the Meningitis Research Foundation helpline (0808 80 10 388) can provide further guidance.


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