- 02 September 2019
- 3 min read
One million teenage boys to miss out on ‘life-saving’ vaccine, charity warns
SubscribeThe Teenage Cancer Trust is calling for all teenage boys and young men to be offered the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination on the NHS.

Teenage boys who will miss out if they don't pay £150
More than a million teenage boys will miss out on potentially life-saving vaccinations, a charity has warned.
The Teenage Cancer Trust is calling for all teenage boys and young men to be offered the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination on the NHS, to prevent them being at risk of HPV-related cancers in adulthood.
It said extending the HPV vaccination programme to all 13 to 24-year-old boys and men will make it fairer for a “missing generation” who cannot currently get vaccinated for free on the NHS The HPV vaccine is being given to 11 to 13-year-old boys across the UK for the first time in this school year, alongside girls the same age, the charity said.
But this leaves more than a million teenage boys in the school years above them unable to get the vaccine on the NHS and they would have to pay about £150 per dose for it, it added.
Older girls were offered vaccine via catch-up programme
The charity said that when the HPV vaccination programme for girls was rolled out by the NHS, girls in older school years could have it for free through a catch-up programme, but this was not being extended to a generation of boys.
Its chief executive Kate Collins said: “The vaccine should be made available for free on the NHS to all men and boys up to the age of 25 who want it, as it is for women and girls.

“While it’s great some boys from this year onwards will have the same protection against HPV-related cancers that teenage girls and women have had for a decade, a generation of teenage boys and young men are being denied that chance.
“Parents of school-age boys may well find one child will get the HPV vaccine for free, whereas an older son will only be protected if they can afford to pay for it.
“That simply isn’t fair, and the cost of around £150 per dose is unaffordable for many.”
The charity said that the assumption boys will have a reduced risk of infection through the immunity of some girls and women was “false”.
Ms Collins added: “Not vaccinating older teenage boys puts them at risk as it relies on the false presumption they will only have sexual partners who don’t have HPV.
“It undermines the UK’s progress on reducing HPV-linked cancers, such as cervical cancer, as this ‘missing generation’ of boys can get and share HPV with others who’ve not been vaccinated.”
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