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Live Science Today: Meningitis is back and Iran war fertilizer shock

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Staff and students queue to receive antibiotics at the University of Kent in Canterbury on March 16, 2026.

Staff and students queue to receive antibiotics at the University of Kent in Canterbury on March 16, 2026. (Image credit: Carl Court via Getty Images)

An “explosive” and “unprecedented” outbreak of meningitis has hit a university in Kent, England, killing two young people and affecting a further 13, U.K. health bosses said. [BBC]

The outbreak, which appears to have begun at university halls of residence, has been identified as meningitis B (MenB), a form of the disease caused by Neisseria meningitidis. These bacteria usually live harmlessly in the throat but can cause life-threatening illness if they enter the spinal fluid or blood. MenB spreads by prolonged close contact and is typically treated by antibiotics.


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