Coverage Comparison
M7 (local)65.5%
England Average88.9%
WHO Herd Immunity Target95%
Measles outbreak risk. Coverage is 65.5% vs 88.9% national average. 29.5 percentage points below the WHO target. To reach 95%, approximately 60 more children in this district would need to be vaccinated.
Key Figures
65.5%
Local Coverage
70
Unvaccinated Children
203
Total Eligible
5
GP Practices
Outbreak Risk Estimate
Rt 5.2
Effective reproduction number
High RiskRt > 1 — outbreak can spread
Measles has a basic reproduction number (R0) of ~15 — one of the most infectious diseases known. At 65.5% coverage, each measles case in M7 could infect approximately 5.2 others. An Rt above 1 means an outbreak can sustain itself.
GP Practices in M7
| Practice | Postcode | Children | Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|
| LIMEFIELD ROAD MEDICAL PRACTICE | M7 4NX | 44 | 54.5% |
| REUT MEDICAL PRACTICE | M7 4NX | 56 | 55.4% |
| NEWBURY GREEN MEDICAL PRACTICE | M7 4NX | 61 | 72.1% |
| DR A CHAUDHRY & DR I JEET | M7 1RD | 42 | 81% |
| MOCHA PARADE MEDICAL PRACTICE | M7 3SE | <5 | Suppressed |
1 practice(s) with fewer than 5 eligible children have been suppressed per NHS guidelines.
MMR Vaccine Facts
The MMR vaccine is safe
The MMR vaccine has been used for over 50 years with an excellent safety record. The 1998 Wakefield study claiming a link to autism was fraudulent and has been fully retracted.
Measles is dangerous
1 in 5 unvaccinated children who contract measles require hospitalisation. Complications include pneumonia, brain inflammation (encephalitis), and death.
Herd immunity protects everyone
95% coverage is needed to protect those who cannot be vaccinated — including newborns and immunocompromised individuals.
Need to Get Vaccinated?
Contact your GP practice to book an MMR vaccination appointment for your child.
Find Your GP →Area Details
DistrictM7
RegionNorth West
ICBGreater Manchester
Data QuarterQ3 2024–25
GP Practices5
Eligible Children203
Vaccinated133
Unvaccinated70
Share This Area
Help people in M7 find this data — share with local groups, councillors, or your GP.