Mother shares haunting image of daughter hospitalised with meningitis after going to floor zero Kent nightclub in outbreak that has killed two

Lying in a hospital bed, looking weak and attached to wires, this is one of the teenage victims of the Kent meningitis outbreak – whose anguished mother feared she was going to die.

Casey Marlow, 19, was rushed to hospital a few days after she and her friends visited a Canterbury nightclub to celebrate her birthday.

A Year 13 pupil called Juliette at a school in Faversham and a student at the University of Kent have both died after a wave of cases was linked to the venue, while 11 people have been left seriously ill.

Meningitis is spread through close contact such as kissing, and microbiology experts today confirmed the Canterbury cases are of the serious bacterial form of the disease.

Infectious disease experts believe the outbreak is ‘unusual’ and may be linked to a combination of lower vaccination rates since the Covid pandemic and a ‘new strain with different behaviours’.

The ACWY-135 vaccination protects against meningitis and is given to 13 to 14-year-olds. Vaccination rates among students are at about 73 per cent.

Casey’s mother Emma Marlow, 38, spoke to the Daily Mail today from her daughter’s bedside in an isolation ward at William Harvey Hospital in Ashford.

She gave permission for this website to use the shocking photograph of her daughter, who appears weak and exhausted after being diagnosed with meningitis.

Mrs Marlow, a custody detention officer from Ashford, explained that Casey began to feel ill a few days after the night out and her condition quickly deteriorated.

She told the Daily Mail today: ‘Casey went to the nightclub on Friday, March 6 and a few days later said she had a sore throat, but at first we didn’t think anything of it.

Casey Marlow, 19, was rushed to hospital a few days after her and her friends spent the evening at a nightclub thought to be at the centre of the deadly outbreak of meningitis

Casey’s mother Emma Marlow said her daughter should make a full recovery with antibiotics

Casey was taken to the hospital by boyfriend Brandon Williams after her symptoms worsened

‘Then on Saturday she pulled up outside my house and called me said she felt awful, she had a raging temperature, a stiff neck and a terrible headache.

‘She looked really pale and we just went to the hospital where she has been ever since. She’s in isolation but she’s getting a bit of colour back and is getting a lot of mummy care.’

Casey, who works at a local Five Guys burger restaurant, told her mother she had ‘felt rough’ during the week after her nightclub visit but put it down to a ‘lurgy’.

Mrs Marlow added: ‘We just didn’t think it was anything serious, just one of those bugs that goes around. She said she had no energy and just felt so exhausted but the Saturday she was taken in she had such a raging temperature and looked awful.

‘You just don’t think something like this will happen to you or one of your family.’

Mrs Marlow revealed that Casey, who should make a full recovery with antibiotics, was at Club Chemistry in Canterbury with another girl and two boys.

She said: ‘We just hope they all pull through. It’s awful for those who have lost children. I would just say to people be aware and even if you aren’t sure just get yourself checked out if you live in the area and don’t feel well.

‘Casey was lucky, she was with her boyfriend in the car, and they drove straight to the hospital where she was immediately seen to. She was put on antibiotics and had a lumbar puncture and had been looking really pale but she’s got some colour back now.

‘Before she went in she said she had been feeling rough, but we just didn’t think it was something as awful as meningitis, you never do.

‘Just before she called to say she didn’t feel well she said she had been on a walk and her legs ached, the symptoms are so similar to other illnesses that you just don’t think it could be something as serious as meningitis.

Students queue at the University of Kent in Canterbury today amid the meningitis outbreak

Matthew (left), 16, and Luca McDonagh (right), 17, in the queue for antibiotics at the University of Kent in Canterbury today. The brothers were at a party in Whitstable, Kent, on Saturday with one person who was asked to go to hospital because he was a close contact of someone who had meningitis, before later being given the all-clear and allowed home

Headmistress Amelia Milroy of Queen Elizabeth Grammar School in Faversham makes a statement today about her student Juliette who died from meningitis in the outbreak in Kent

Students wearing face masks walk through the University of Kent campus in Canterbury today

‘I would just say to anyone who has been in the Canterbury area to be aware and if they don’t feel well get themselves checked out.

‘I’m just going to stay with her and make sure she gets better as quickly as possible, bless her but she’s still feeling weak and exhausted.’

Mrs Marlow added: ‘I’ve had the UK Health Security Agency on, and they wanted to know who else Casey was with that night so they could be traced and checked.

‘They have been helpful and have been sending me lots of information but what I’m worried about is that if this was known about why there were no warnings, if I had known I wouldn’t have let her go to Canterbury that night.’

Meningitis alert: What are the symptoms and can it be treated? 

– What is meningitis and what causes it??

Meningitis is an infection of the protective membranes that surround the brain and spinal cord. It is usually caused by a bacterial or viral infection. Bacterial meningitis is rarer but more serious than viral meningitis.

It can affect anyone but is more common in babies, children, teenagers and young adults.

Meningitis can be very serious if not treated quickly, and can lead to life-threatening sepsis and permanent damage to the brain or nerves.

– What are the symptoms?

Symptoms of meningitis and sepsis can include a high temperature, cold hands and feet, vomiting, confusion, muscle and joint pain, pale, mottled or blotchy skin, spots or a rash, a headache, a stiff neck, aversion to bright lights, being very sleepy and seizures.

Symptoms can appear in any order and some may not appear at all.

– Why are young people at risk?

According to Meningitis Now, one in four 15 to 19-year-olds carry meningococcal bacteria in the back of their throats, compared to one in 10 of the UK population.

People can carry this harmlessly without becoming unwell, but it can be passed from person to person by coughing, sneezing and kissing.

Increased social interaction in this age group means the bacteria can be passed on more easily.

In universities, students can be more vulnerable because of living in more ‘cramped’ housing or halls of residence. Young people also come together from all over the world to live, study and socialise.

– What causes these outbreaks and how serious are they?

Outbreaks can happen when a particular meningococcal strain enters a community where people are mixing closely.

Universities which include halls of residence, parties, and large social groups, can help the bacteria to spread more easily.

But the risk to the general public in Kent is low, with people at the highest risk usually close contacts of cases.

– How is meningitis treated?

Hospital treatment is recommended by the NHS for all cases of bacterial meningitis.

Treatments include antibiotics and fluids administered directly into a vein, oxygen if there are breathing difficulties, and in some cases steroid medication to prevent swelling around the brain.

Patients may need to stay in hospital for a few days or weeks.

In cases of mild meningitis, patients may be sent home if tests confirm it is viral, which usually gets better on its own. Most patients start to feel better within seven to 10 days.

But severe viral meningitis may also be treated in hospital.

– What action is being taken to stop the spread in Kent?

Close contacts of the University of Kent students affected will be given antibiotics.

On Sunday, the UKHSA said specialists were interviewing affected individuals and their families to ‘help identify all close contacts and arrange antibiotics to limit spread’.

The agency had also worked with the University of Kent to provide advice letters to all 16,000 students, providing information on recent cases, the signs and symptoms of the illness, how to obtain antibiotics, and what to do if they felt unwell.

– Are there vaccines available for meningitis?

There are two vaccines for meningitis.

The MenACWY vaccine is a single dose jab that protects against four strains of meningococcal bacteria.

It is offered to teenagers in school and is also available to those entering university, up to the age of 25.

Experts say that this jab is ‘highly effective at protecting against invasive disease’.

But Andrew Preston, a professor of microbial pathogenicity at University of Bath, said that uptake among teenagers was about 73%.

‘So there are a lot of unvaccinated students given the size of the student cohort,’ he said.

Elsewhere, there are the MenB, 6-in-1, pneumococcal and MMRV vaccines for babies and children.

– What should you do if you think you have meningitis?

The NHS recommends that people call 999 for an ambulance or go to their nearest A&E.

People are advised to trust their instincts, as someone with meningitis or sepsis can get a lot worse very quickly.

It comes as two teenage brothers were left terrified after going to a party in Whitstable on Saturday, hosted by a friend who was asked to go to hospital because he was a close contact of someone who had meningitis, before later being given the all-clear and allowed home.

Matthew, 16, and Luca McDonagh, 17, said another person from their friendship circle was already in an induced coma after recently contracting meningitis.

Meningitis can be spread through close contact, and microbiology experts today confirmed that the outbreak in Kent is of the serious bacterial form of the disease.

The vaccination ACWY-135 is received by teenagers in England between the ages of 13 and 14, in Year 9. Experts say vaccination rates among students are 73 per cent.

Infectious disease experts believe the outbreak at the University of Kent is ‘unusual’ and may be linked to a ‘new strain with different behaviours’. Eleven people have been left seriously ill, most of whom are also believed to be university students.

More than 30,000 students and staff at the campus have been alerted by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), warning them to stay vigilant against symptoms. The university has now postponed some in-person exams and moved others online.

Luca, who is in Year 13 at Simon Langton Grammar School, said no one in his year group at school is allowed to go in for lessons. He and his brother, at the same school, were told to come to the University of Kent to receive a precautionary antibiotic.

Matthew said: ‘It’s quite scary. I can’t believe it. It’s just insane. It’s actually happening since Covid. I thought this literally never happened again, and then I’m in a massive queue. It’s completely unbelievable. I never thought this would happen again.’

‘We’ve been told that we don’t even know if the pill that they give you is actually going to help us,’ Matthew said. Luca added: ‘It’s pretty terrifying.’

The invasive outbreak is believed to be linked to a social event at a nightclub in Canterbury, which some of those affected had recently attended. The UKHSA is now arranging antibiotics for some students in the Canterbury area following the outbreak.

Queues formed today outside the Senate building after the university asked anyone who believes they have come into contact with those who contracted meningitis and have not been contacted by the UKHSA to attend between 9am and 4pm.

The NHS states meningitis can spread through close, direct contact with an infected person’s saliva or mucus, such as kissing, coughing, sneezing or sharing utensils.

Student Jude File, 15, was also at the Whitstable party and received a text from friends on Monday to say one of those who attended had been diagnosed with meningitis and was now in a coma.

Speaking with his father Dan’s permission, Jude told the Daily Mail: ‘Everyone’s a bit freaked out but I’ve been to get the vaccine so I’m sure it will be okay.

‘What’s worrying is how quickly this is spreading and it doesn’t seem to be isolated. I feel fine at the moment, but I didn’t go to school as I thought it was better to stay home.’

The party was held at a private address in Whitstable on Saturday night and the person in a coma was said to be a boy aged around 17 to 18.

Jude added: ‘I don’t know him, he’s a friend of a friend. I was just at the party as a friend’s band was playing there.

‘It was for pupils from Langton Boys School and Langton Girls School in Canterbury. I don’t go there, I’m at school in Folkestone but have friends there.

‘We got the bus to Whitstable from Canterbury and there were Kent University students on there, so I wonder if that was the source ?

‘I went to the university to get the vaccine this morning, it’s a tablet called ciprofloxacin, I had to say who I have been in contact with at the party. It’s just prevention but best be safe than sorry.’

After the death of Juliette, Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School headmistress Amelia McIlroy fought back tears as she said outside the school gates today: ‘We’ve got a lot of very upset children. It is with great sadness that we are confirming the loss of Juliette – a much loved and treasured member of our school community.

‘Juliette was a student at our school for seven years. She was incredibly kind, thoughtful and intelligent, and she loved our school. She was really very happy here.

‘Juliette embraced everything that school had to offer, with great enthusiasm and joy, and her humour and her positivity were captivating. In short she was a lovely girl. Her beautiful smile, her loving nature and her sense of fun will be hugely missed.

‘We are all devastated. Our love and our thoughts are with her family and friends at this terribly sad time. Our priority now is the safety and well-being of all members of our school community, and we are continuing to work closely with the UKHSA to ensure they are all as well as they can be.’

Andrew Preston, professor of microbial pathogenicity at the University of Bath, said today: ‘Uptake of the ACWY vaccine among adolescents is around 73 per cent, so there are a lot of unvaccinated students given the size of the student cohort. So, an outbreak of this size and speed is very unusual, and of great concern.

‘It is important to characterise the cause of the outbreak. A sudden change in disease pattern could indicate something like a new strain with different behaviours. It will be important to ascertain the vaccination status of those affected.

‘Fortunately, antibiotic resistance isn’t yet a major feature of these bacteria, so prophylactic antibiotics can be given to close contacts of cases, as is being done in Kent.

‘There will also be an opportunity for those who did not receive their adolescent vaccine the chance to have a catch up jab, but the immunity from that will take a little while to develop.’

Mr Preston added: ‘UKHSA have reported the outbreak is likely to be meningococcal, so Neisseria meningitidis bacteria. These bacteria inhabit the nasopharynx and in the vast majority of cases colonise that niche without causing any issues.

Students queue at the University of Kent in Canterbury today amid the meningitis outbreak

Face masks are distributed as people queue for antibiotics at the University of Kent today

Students queuing for antibiotics outside a University of Kent building in Canterbury today

‘In a very small number of cases, the bacteria can gain access to the blood, where the pathogenic Neisseria meningitidis can survive and multiply. This is sepsis, another devastating disease.

‘From there, bacteria can cross the blood brain barrier to access the central nervous system, leading to meningitis.’

Professor Paul Hunter, an infectious diseases expert at the University of East Anglia said meningitis vaccines are part of the UK’s routine schedule run by the NHS, which focuses on protecting against the most common strains:

MenB vaccine for infants (8 weeks, 12 weeks and one year)

MenACWY vaccine for teenagers (usually in school year 9 – ages 13 and 14)

Catch-up MenACWY jabs are also available for young adults who didn’t get it aged 14

The decision not to routinely vaccinate teenagers against Group B is based on advice from the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation.

Mr Hunter said: ‘The committee looks at cost-effectiveness, and current analysis suggests the Group B vaccine in teenagers isn’t economically justified.

Another key issue is that the Group B vaccine does not stop people carrying or spreading the bacteria. By contrast, vaccines against Group C and ACWY strains reduce carriage and transmission.

Some other countries do offer MenB vaccines to teens as a booster – although it is not known whether Men B is involved in the Kent outbreak.

Dr Michael Head, senior research fellow in global health at the University of Southampton, also said: ‘There is a high level of ‘carriage’ of the bug that typically cause meningitis outbreaks, with maybe 20 per cent of the population harmlessly carrying the bacteria in their nose or throat. 

‘If individuals encounter a strain that they do not have sufficient immunity against, then infection is possible. Carriage rates are usually highest in teenagers and younger adults, hence why new populations mixing at university can cause outbreaks. 

‘And as we have seen, the disease can be severe and occasionally fatal. Vaccination has been the key tool to reduce the numbers of meningitis cases and deaths.’

Meningitis is an inflammation of the protective membranes covering the brain and spinal cord. It can be caused by bacteria, viruses, or fungi, with bacterial meningitis being the most severe.

The disease can progress rapidly, leading to serious health complications such as brain damage, hearing loss, or even death if not treated promptly.

Face masks are distributed as people queue for antibiotics at the University of Kent today

Students queue at the University of Kent in Canterbury today amid the meningitis outbreak

Health inspectors going into Tyler Block at the University of Kent in Canterbury last night

Common symptoms include a high fever, headache, stiff neck, sensitivity to light, confusion, and in severe cases, seizures. 

Officials were today working to establish the strain of the illness, thought most likely to be the deadliest type, meningitis B.

Trevor Reid, of charity Meningitis Now, said: ‘This is not the type level of cases we have heard of for many, many years. It is very rare that we would see anything like this and we are extremely concerned.’ 

One person in every two or three who survives bacterial meningitis is left with one or more permanent problems such as hearing loss, brain injury or behavioural changes.

The MenB vaccine – the only protection against the bacteria – is only available on the NHS for young children, as they are seen as the most at risk. 

This protects them for a couple of years, and for older children a booster or vaccine costs about £220 privately.

Campaigners want a vaccine or booster to be offered to young adults on the NHS, warning many do not know they are starting university unprotected.

Mr Reid said: ‘There is a generation growing up without protection. It’s tragic that you have these young people going to university believing that they have had a vaccine and are protected but they’re not.

‘We have a lot to do with parents who are bereaved. They want us to be even more vocal than we are. What victims’ families tell us is that they don’t know they’re not protected and they want that message out there.’

Keith Neal, retired professor of the epidemiology of infectious disease at the University of Nottingham, said: ‘I dealt with many university cases and a few community outbreaks in the past when meningitis was more common. This current outbreak is unusual.

”Invasive’ means the germ has invaded into the blood stream or brain linings from the throat.

‘Risk to those in the Kent area is low although this is a community outbreak so there is a small risk; I suspect in the older teenage and student groups. Under 5s are most at risk to becoming seriously unwell with meningitis but teenagers and students are at a higher risk due to social mixing.’

Speaking at the university today, Mashaal Chughtai, 22, a third-year law student, said: ‘My mum and dad are on their way to get me now from Birmingham. It is going to take them about four hours. My mum rang about seven times asking if I was alright. It is all very strange.

‘I am in a dodgeball society and my friend texted me. At first we thought it was someone in Kent, not a student, but then we were told someone in the university had died.

‘We got an email from the UKHSA saying these are the symptoms and to watch out if we start to feel any of them. Then the university emailed us too. I am going up to the Senate building just as a precaution because my mum told me to take the antibiotics.’

One girl living in Tyler Court, where an ambulance and doctors in hazmat suits arrived yesterday, added: ‘A close family friend was taken to hospital last night because she was complaining of symptoms. She was in my flat. We heard this morning her temperature has come down and hopefully she will be alright.’

Meanwhile a second block, thought to be the Turing block, is also said to be affected.

Josh, a man whose sister is in hospital with suspected meningitis, spoke to Sky News while queueing to get antibiotics this morning.

He said: ‘It shakes your day a little bit, I can tell you that. As far as I’m aware she’s actually just spoken to the consultant again, they’re going to keep her in a little bit longer. But to the best of my knowledge, I’ve just spoken to my mum, and she seems okay.’

Confirming that he was queueing for the medicine, Josh added: ‘Having been Mother’s Day yesterday we were together, me, my mum and my sister, and so obviously it’s precautionary more than anything, but we just wanted to make sure that we could get up here. We spoke to 111 and this is what they said to do.’

On campus last night, several people could be seen wearing masks in their own flats.

Students queue at the University of Kent in Canterbury today amid the meningitis outbreak

Students queue at the University of Kent in Canterbury today amid the meningitis outbreak

Students queue at the University of Kent in Canterbury today amid the meningitis outbreak

An ambulance was also seen parked outside one of the student blocks, with paramedics dressed in protective clothing and face masks preparing to enter.

Final-year history student Sam Shuker said: ‘It’s quite grim. I didn’t think I’d be dealing with this four days out from my dissertation deadline.

‘My thoughts go out to those who are suffering and please stay safe. I don’t think we know what strain it is at this point but we’ve got to be on our toes. Social distance and all that.’

Eloise Thorne, a third-year psychology student, said the mood on campus was ‘very surreal’. She added: ‘It just feels like Covid all over again. Everyone is confused and no one knows what’s going on.

‘It’s really sad as well. I keep seeing people spreading videos of people who are sick around and I just feel like that might not be the best idea. It’s just scary, sad.’

Ms Thorne also said: ‘I think people need to take it seriously so more people don’t end up like that [seriously ill]’.

Brittany Nsongo, a first-year astrophysics student, said she has had a few friends report in group chats that they were feeling sick with flu-like symptoms.

She has been alarmed by the circulation online of images of students allegedly being taken out of buildings while visibly unwell. ‘It just feels like there is no respect for the actual victims,’ Ms Nsongo added.

Another student, Ethan Falkner, 23, who is studying politics and international relations at the university, said friends of his were ‘nervous and anxious’.

‘First reaction to hearing the news is wishes to the people who have lost their lives already and to the ones currently in hospital suffering,’ he said.

‘I had friends sat in the library this evening who on finding out the news, immediately packed bags and left to avoid contact with people.

‘The university are yet to communicate to myself and as it stands my friends I’m in contact with and others in the university community have had no contact from the university itself regarding this critical issue.’

Amelia McIlroy, head teacher at Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School, told parents: ‘It is with great sadness that we can confirm that on Saturday one of our much loved students in Year 13, died of meningitis. We are all absolutely devastated.

‘Our love and thoughts are with their family and friends. Our priority now is the safety, well-being and support of all members of our school community at this terribly sad time.

‘We will be working with UKHSA to ensure that all appropriate actions are taken to protect our students and staff.’

She added: ‘If your child feels unwell – particularly with vomiting, purple-bluish bruise-type markings, unexplained high temperature or has cold hands and feet – you should seek immediate medical attention for them.’

Students are said to be at particular risk because of how often young people come together in large numbers.

Physiotherapy student Meg Draper, 18, died from meningitis weeks after starting at Bournemouth University last October.

The swimming and netball player, from Pontypool in South Wales, was immunised against meningitis A, C, W and Y and her parents said it was ‘horrific’ to find out a separate vaccination against MenB had existed.

They said their daughter would still be with them today if she had been offered the life-saving jab and are calling for a vaccine, or booster, to be made available to young adults on the NHS.

Trish Mannes, UKHSA regional deputy director for the South East, said: ‘We understand that many people at the university and in the wider community will be affected by this sad news and we would like to offer our condolences to the friends and family involved.

‘Students and staff will understandably be feeling worried about the risk of further cases; however, we would like to reassure them that close contacts of cases have been given antibiotics as a precautionary measure.

‘Advice and support is being offered to the wider student community, and to local hospitals and NHS 111, and we’re monitoring the situation closely.

‘Meningococcal disease can progress rapidly, so it’s essential that students and staff are alert to the signs and symptoms of meningococcal meningitis and septicaemia, which can include a fever, headache, rapid breathing, drowsiness, shivering, vomiting and cold hands and feet.

‘Septicaemia can also cause a characteristic rash that does not fade when pressed against a glass.

‘Students are particularly at risk of missing the early warning signs of meningitis because they can be easily confused with other illnesses such as a bad cold, flu or even a hangover.

‘That’s why it’s vital that, if a friend goes to bed unwell, you check on them regularly and don’t hesitate to seek medical help by contacting their GP or calling NHS 111 if they have these symptoms or you’re concerned about them. This could save their life.’

There were 378 cases of invasive meningococcal disease in 2024/25, compared with 340 in 2023/24.

Cases of MenB, the most common cause of bacterial meningitis in the UK, have also risen. There were 313 cases compared to 301 in the previous year.

There are numerous strains of the meningococcal infection.

The MenACWY vaccination gives protection against MenA, MenC, MenW, and MenY and is routinely offered to teenagers in school Years 9 and 10 – and it can be given up to the age of 25 if it has been missed.

However, this vaccine does not protect against all forms of meningitis. Other strains such as MenB can circulate in young adults.

Some students at the University of Kent have been given antibiotics while others are in hospital. The specific strain of meningitis has not yet been identified.

A spokeswoman for the UKHSA said: ‘We can confirm that UKHSA has worked with the University of Kent to provide advice letters to all 16,000 students, advising on recent cases, signs and symptoms, how to obtain antibiotics, and what to do if they feel unwell.’

Not all 16,000 students at the university will be given antibiotics, only those who are regarded as ‘close contacts’ of those affected.

Following news of the deaths, Canterbury MP Rosie Duffield posted: ‘Terrible news about two students at University of Kent this weekend.

‘Like most people in Canterbury, I’m thinking of those who loved them and will be most affected by these tragic deaths. Please follow the advice from the NHS which I’ll post here. I’ll update here with any information my team and I receive.’

Helen Whately, MP for Faversham and Mid Kent, also said: ‘The meningitis outbreak in our area is a huge shock.

‘Feeling so deeply sad for the young lives lost – a year 13 pupil at QEGS [Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School] and uni of Kent student. My heart goes out to their families.

‘It’s incredibly worrying too for the families of the young people in hospital, and others at risk. I am asking the NHS urgently for more information and guidance, especially given the rumours going round about where they may have picked it up.’

James MacCleary, MP for Lewes, tweeted: ‘Devastating news from my old university. So sad to hear that two young people have lost their lives. We were all urged to get a meningitis vaccine when I was a student at Kent. I hope those in hospital make a full recovery.’

A University of Kent spokesman said: ‘We are deeply saddened to confirm that one student from the University of Kent has died following a case of invasive meningitis.

‘Our thoughts are with the student’s family, friends and the wider university community at this extremely difficult time.

‘The safety of our students and staff remains our highest priority. We are working closely with public health teams and are in touch with staff and students to ensure they get the advice and support they need.’

Louise Jones-Roberts, owner of Club Chemistry in Canterbury, confirmed the venue had been contacted by the UKHSA.

‘We have been told somebody was in our club at the weekend who has since been diagnosed with meningitis,’ she said. ‘They have asked us if we have any methods for tracing who has been in to us.

‘We have an ID scanner but that is more of a security measure… It takes pictures of some driving licences, ID cards and on so on. We’ve got tickets for events so we could trace ticket-holders, but most people pay on the door.’

She said her thoughts were with the families of those affected by the meningitis outbreak.

‘I’m devastated,’ she said. ‘I can’t imagine what the families are going through. Our thoughts are with the families. Meningitis affects healthy, young people and this is devastating. We will stay closed until we get further advice from the UKHSA.’

Tom Nutt, chief executive of Meningitis Now, said: ‘We are deeply saddened to hear of the deaths of two young people following the reported outbreak of meningitis linked to the University of Kent.

‘Meningitis can progress very quickly and its impact is devastating, particularly for young people and their loved ones.

‘University students and young adults are among the groups at increased risk because meningitis bacteria can spread more easily in settings where people live, study and socialise closely together.

‘We urge students, staff and families to remain vigilant for the signs and symptoms of meningitis.’

Amira Campbell, president of the National Union of Students, said: ‘We are saddened to hear of the deaths, those who are hospitalised and the young people who are unwell.

‘Our thoughts are with their family, friends and everyone at the University of Kent. We encourage everyone who is concerned to follow the advice being shared by health professionals.

‘There is simply not enough awareness of meningitis, especially as young people head off to university. While we all expect the inevitable freshers flu, there are deadly viral strains also circulating, which students need to be protected against and aware of.’