Horrified parents have been speaking out about the signs and symptoms of Strep A after a ninth child lost their lives to the deadly infection.
The five-year-old was today named as Belfast girl Stella-Lilly McCorkindale, who was a pupil at Black Mountain Primary School, in Northern Ireland.
Stella-Lilly treated at the Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children after falling ill last week but died on Monday. Her father Robert has since thanked people for their ‘prayers, thoughts, feelings and love’ following his daughter’s tragic death.
Now parents whose children are either still battling the disease – which is raging across the UK – or who have overcome it have spoken out about their ordeals in the hope of helping other families spot the infection earlier.
Among them is Aimee Byron, a stay-at-home mother whose two young boys both contracted Strep A days apart.
The 22-year-old, from Fareham in Hampshire, said the first warning signs of the disease came last month, when her lad Jamie Jones, three, became tired and started screaming in pain, holding his head saying he had ‘tickles in his throat’.

Jamie Jones, three, and his younger brother Drew, 17 months, both contracted Strep A which left the pair incredibly ill

Little Drew’s mouth, pictured. showed signs of the deadly bacterial infection, with big white spots covering his throat

But Drew’s mother, Aimee Byron, said one of the first symptoms she noticed was a rash around her son’s mouth (pictured). A day later and he developed a sore throat as well as white puffy spots on his tonsils

Aimee Byron, 22, rushed both of her children to hospital after they contracted the infection, which has so far claimed the lives of nine children in the UK since September. She is pictured a couple of years ago with her eldest son, Jamie
It was covered in white big spots and doctors told Aimee he was suffering from tonsillitis, she said.
But after a few days of suffering, she took him back to the GP where he was diagnosed with strep A and taken to hospital for treatment.
Jamie had a sore throat, large glands, was drowsy and holding his ears. He also couldn’t swallow drinks and wasn’t passing urine.
But just a day after he returned home, little brother Drew, 17 months, was diagnosed with the same bacterial infection, after catching it from Jamie.
With both boys at home sick – but recovering – Aimee and Will Jones, 24, a salesman, say they feel lucky they trusted her instincts and didn’t believe it was just tonsillitis.
Aimee, who was speaking out after a 12-year-old boy from who used to attend school in the neigbouring town of Waterlooville reportedly died from Strep A this week, said: ‘It made me feel so helpless because you feel like screaming at the doctor.
‘I know they have done years and years in studying but I know my child.
‘It was so refreshing to hear the doctor say they weren’t going to question me on my child.
‘I am so unbelievably lucky to have my Jamie at home, getting better when this story could have had such a devastating end.
‘He is luckily at the better end of the scale now in terms of Strep A severity but if left it could’ve been worse.’
On November 29, Jamie woke up feeling drowsy and restless but Aimee thought it was down to him having a late night the day before.
Later that day he was screaming in pain holding his head.
Worried Aimee looked into his mouth and saw his tonsil were ‘nearly touching’ and the back of his throat was covered in white big spots and small red pinpricks.
After a restless night, Aimee called the doctors. The family received a phone consultation and after sending over pictures the doctor diagnosed Jamie with tonsillitis and told Aimee to monitor how much he was drinking and weeing.
Aimee said: ‘I had looked at photos online of Strep Throat and what Jamie had looked exactly the same. I questioned that and he didn’t really make a comment.
‘We got antibiotics and started them straight away. Jamie went for a wee Wednesday afternoon and didn’t go again until Friday morning and when he went it was the tiniest amount.
‘On Thursday evening, I thought “I’m not having this” and I got told I can either have a phone appointment within hours or take him to the hospital.’
Aimee rushed Jamie to hospital where she asked if it could be strep throat, because his symptoms were ‘identical’ to photos online.
Aimee again was told to wait five days and call the GP if Jamie’s condition had worsened or not improved, she claims.
Unsatisfied, Aimee took him to a GP. She said: ‘After seeing how poorly he was, the state of his throat and that he had such poor urine output she called the Paediatric Department at the Queen Alexandra Hospital, Portsmouth.
‘She noticed that all down the back of his throat was covered in tiny ulcers and she said it was the worst throat in a child she had ever seen.’

Jamie Jones, three, became the first of Aimee’s two children to contract the illness, which was later caught by his younger brother, Drew
Jamie was in the hospital for around five hours, he had a swab taken from the back of his throat, was given Difflam spray and was closely monitored with doctors confirming Jamie had Strep A.
Drew started to feel ‘unsettled’ on Saturday – when Aimee noticed spots around his mouth.
On Sunday, Drew’s condition worsened. Like his brother, he developed a sore throat as well as red spots around his mouth and white puffy spots on his tonsils.
Aimee had a telephone consultation for Drew the day after his brother came out of hospital, and he was immediately diagnosed with Strep A and given antibiotics.
Aimee added: ‘Jamie has turned a corner over the last few days.
‘I am so lucky it was caught when it was as now we know what we are dealing with and how to manage it while he gets better.
‘I knew it was Strep A and if it wasn’t that then it definitely wasn’t just tonsillitis.
‘Just be aware this horrible infection spreads so fast. Both of my little boys now have Strep A.
‘My youngest’s Strep A got worse so now he has sores around his mouth and a rash on his feet.

The ninth child to die from Strep A has been named locally as Stella-Lily McCorkindale, five, of Belfast. She is pictured

Camila Rose, four, has been on a ventilator in Alder Hey Children’s Hospital in Liverpool since last Sunday. She was initially sent home with an inhaler a week earlier

Muhammad Ibrahim Ali, from High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, died after contracting the bacterial infection Strep A last month

Hanna Roap, who attended Victoria Primary School in Penarth, Wales, died after contracting Strep A earlier this month. Her family say they have been ‘traumatised’ by her death
‘They have said that he now also has Scarlet Fever as well as Strep A.
‘My eldest, Jamie, is doing so much better. We just now need to hope my youngest follows that and starts feeling better soon.’
The news comes as another school announced a confirmed case of highly contagious Strep A.
Cale Green Primary School in Stockport sent a message to parents on Monday saying: ‘We would like to inform parents / carers of children in….. class that there has been a confirmed case of Strep A in a child within the class.
‘Thankfully this was quickly diagnosed and is being successfully treated with a course of antibiotics. As directed, we have informed the local authority and Stockport’s Public Health department who have sent the following information and guidance.’
A parent of one child at the school said initially only families of children in the same class as the confirmed case were informed, with others sent a generic ‘winter infections letter’. But on Tuesday all parents were told about the case.
‘We should all have been made aware,’ she said. ‘I only knew about it because my friend’s daughter is in same class as the child.
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‘My news feed is full of worried parents. I don’t want my child in school, but will get I trouble If I keep him off. I think it would make sense for schools to close early for Christmas.’
The announcement follows news that a primary school in Hull made the decision to close following an outbreak of scarlet fever.
St Vincent’s Voluntary Catholic Academy shut for a ‘deep clean’ on Friday as a small number of children were coming down with what is believed to be scarlet fever.
Parents at the school gates on Monday were in agreement that it was the right precaution to take, as children as young as five had suffered seriously with the nasty infection.
One family member told Hull Live of how a five-year-old girl became ill a week last Friday. She said: ‘We noticed she wasn’t herself when we picked her up from school and had come down with something.
‘We got her in at the out of hours clinic in Bransholme the following day and it was confirmed she needed to be isolated and on antibiotics. At that point we hadn’t seen much on the news about it all so we weren’t in too much of a panic.
‘She suffered very badly with it, bless her. Thankfully, it didn’t turn into Strep A.’

Cale Green Primary School, in Stockport, Greater Manchester, today alerted all parents following a confirmed case of Strep A among pupils. Pictured is the school

This map shows the rates of invasive Group A Streptococcal disease (iGAS), a serious form of Strep A infection in England’s regions. Rates are cases per 100,000 people with the outbreak highest in Yorkshire and the Humber and lowest in the East of England


Another mother at the school said that both of her children were kept off school with scarlet fever. She said: ‘My daughter has a disability and is vulnerable so we were concerned for her being around others. They finished antibiotics yesterday so will hopefully be okay now.’
Laura Rooney, of Banbridge in Northern Ireland, said her five-year-old daughter, Farah contracted Strep A and that her condition rapidly deteriorated, with the youngster developing pneumonia as a result of the infection.
‘She has been on five antibiotics in total and we’re still trying to find out what the source of this new rash is. It has really hit her hard,’ reported the Derbyshire Times.
‘Last week, it took a turn for the worst. I took it upon myself to put the child in the car and take her to hospital. It was there that they did an X-ray of her chest and discovered that she had as well. That’s what she was battling with.’
Five-year-old George Higham contracted the deadly infection last August and his mother, Jenna, said his screams would forever ‘haunt her’.
Jenna, 24, of Sutton on Sea, Lincolnshire, claimed her GP misdiagnosed her son’s symptoms as thrush. But she was certain he needed hospital treatment and called 111.
He was rushed to Grimsby Children’s Hospital and later made a full recovery. But speaking of the ordeal, Jenna told the Mirror: ‘It was such a frightening time.
‘He developed a heart murmur because he was so ill and he was screaming in agony from the pains in his legs…His screams will always haunt me. I am just so thankful he made it through.’
In all, nine children are now known to have died from the bacteria, commonly found in the throat and on skin, since September.
These include Hanna Roap, who attended Victoria Primary School in Penarth, Wales. Her family say they have been ‘traumatised’ by her death.
Muhammad Ibrahim Ali, four, died at home in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, on November 14 after suffering a cardiac arrest following a Strep A infection.
Meanwhile, four-year-old Camila Rose has been on a ventilator in Alder Hey Children’s Hospital in Liverpool since last Sunday after contracting Strep A.
And this week, a 12-year-old from Hampshire became the eighth child to lose their lives in the Strep A outbreak.
The boy attended the fee-paying Colfe’s School in Lewisham, south east London. But it is believed he was from Hampshire.
According to Portsmouth newspaper The News, headteacher of the school Alison Syred-Paul said: ‘Very tragically, we have learned of the death in recent days of a child who attended our school, who was also diagnosed with an invasive Group A Streptococcal (iGAS) infection.
‘We are absolutely devastated by the loss of one of our young pupils and offer our sincere and heartfelt condolences to the child’s family at this extremely sad time.’
Downing Street has warned parents to be vigilant of the infection, which can normally be treated easily with antibiotics, especially if prescribed early on.
But the first symptoms, such as a fever and sore throat, can be mistaken for a range of common winter viruses for which these drugs are useless. One top health adviser today said it made it ‘very difficult’ to detect.
Other symptoms can include muscle aches and vomiting. Strep A can also cause scarlet fever.
Medics have been told for years to be cautious about prescribing antibiotics due to fears this was leading to bacteria becoming increasingly immune to the life-saving medications.
In exceptionally rare cases, the bug — spread in the same way as Covid, through close contact such as sneezing, kissing and touching — can penetrate deeper into the body and cause life-threatening problems such as sepsis. The complication is called iGAS.
It comes amid warnings that the UK is running low on antibiotics. Three medications routinely used to fight off the bug — or tell-tale symptoms which might be caused by other bacterial infections — are listed as being in short supply.
Pharmacists told MailOnline the ongoing shortages, which could rumble on until into 2023, were ‘heartbreaking’. Parents scrambling to find drugs are being turned away due to a lack of supplies, they claimed.
It comes as GPs were told to be ready to dish out antibiotics to youngsters showing even the slightest Strep A symptoms as part of a drive to spot the bug early — when it’s most treatable.
In Scotland, the nation’s Health Secretary today warned the number of Strep A infections in the country had increased, but that there have been no deaths from the condition – yet.
Despite the increases elsewhere in the UK, Humza Yousaf said there was no evidence of a pronounced spike in cases in Scotland.
Public Health Scotland said on Monday there had been eight reports of invasive Group A Strep (Gas) infections in Scotland – the rarest and most severe types of infections – in children under the age of 10.
‘Reports of Group A Strep infections, or Gas as it’s known, have increased right across Scotland,’ the Health Secretary said in Holyrood.
‘There have been no reported deaths in Scotland (from) related Group A Strep or indeed invasive Group A Strep conditions.
‘I understand, of course, that the reporting of Gas conditions will be concerning but let me offer some reassurance.
‘The vast majority of Gas infections present as mild illness that is easily treated by penicillin or other antibiotics and invasive infections are, thankfully, rare.’
The Health Secretary assured MSPs that health services are “on alert” to Strep A and guidance was being drawn up for nurseries and schools.
Questioned by Labour deputy leader Jackie Baillie about how children can be seen quickly, as new figures show A&E waiting times at their worst on record, Mr Yousaf said the appropriate guidance was being given across the health service, but stressed that GPs should be the primary point of contact for potential infections.
He also said there had been a ‘marked and significant increase’ in calls to the NHS24 helpline over the weekend relating to children under the age of 14.