Health officials in New South Wales that babies are at risk in the state's worst outbreak of Rotavirus in five years.

NSW Health recorded more than 1,300 cases of the highly-contagious virus so far this year, with 412 of these recorded last month.

"Rotavirus can be really serious, especially in the youngest infants, leading to severe dehydration and even death in some cases," said paediatric infectious diseases specialist Dr. Brendan McMullan to the ABC. 

Hey kid, wash your hands!

"We're a little over 1,200 for the year and we haven't seen this many notifications since 2012," said NSW Health's Dr. Vicky Sheppeard, who confirms that the highest rate of infection was in children aged two to four.  Metropolitan Sydney was the worst-affected area.

Rotavirus is a common cause of gastroenteritis for babies and preschool children and is passed from person to person by touching contaminated hands or faeces.  Symptoms of rotavirus include fever, diarrhoea, vomiting and abdominal cramps.  Babies and seniors aren't the only people at risk, teens and adults need to be careful and should wash their hands. Sweetie massage chick getting fucked Horny Alexis Ford is into hardcore buggering Stepteen Anya Olsen licks stepmom Reagan Darling is tempting fellow with her tits Roxy Raye stretches her anus with a metal speculum and receives an anal reaming Kinky whore Melany loves big stuff in her pussy Cute and Tiny Blonde Halle nugget porn Whore wife Jodi West getting fucked by next door guy Ralph Long Chick receives both of her lusty fuck holes fucked Frisky blonde Kayla Green felt hard cock in her tight ass hole Independence fuck with freedom babe Phoenix Marie Playful bitches Rowan and Lorna try their new toys

There is a vaccine for rotavirus which is given to babies at two and four months as part of the routine immunisation schedule.  It has helped to reduce the number of serious infections that require hospitalization.  But the vaccine is only 70 percent effective, and

"Immunity from the vaccine wanes over several years, so that every few years there will be sufficient numbers of people who did not gain protection from the vaccine, or have lost protection, to allow an outbreak to occur," read the statement from NSW Health.