What's STORY of infectious diseases in UK?

A study looking at how children's immune systems respond to COVID-19, and to vaccines for other infectious diseases, is asking children under the age of 20 who live in the Bristol area to consider taking part. The research project is being run by the Bristol Children's Vaccine Centre (BCVC) at Bristol Medical School, and the Oxford Vaccine Group which is part of the University of Oxford.

The aim of this study is to help understand the STORY (Serum Testing Of Representative Youngsters) of infectious diseases in the UK. One of the ways people's bodies develop protection against infectious diseases is by developing antibodies, either after an infection or following a vaccination. Researchers are able to measure the antibodies to see how well protected people are from those infectious diseases.

The research team, working with Public Health England, will develop a new way of surveying how well protected people are from infectious diseases by collecting blood samples from people who represent different groups across society.

Researchers will take a blood sample from people aged from birth to 20 years of age to look at their antibody levels against important infectious diseases. The study team is particularly interested in Group C meningococcus (MenC) and diphtheria and in the novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

Dr Marion Roderick, the study's lead investigator and visiting Senior Lecturer at Bristol Medical School and consultant paediatrician at Bristol Royal Hospital for Children, said: "This research will help us understand whether we need to make any changes to the UK vaccine schedule and tell us about the number of infections with COVID-19 in the UK.

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