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U.S. Whooping Cough Outbreak Shows Vaccine Need
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An outbreak of whooping cough sickened 24 adults
in Illinois, U.S. health officials reported on Thursday, saying the incident
illustrates how the childhood disease is making a comeback in the United
States.
Whooping cough, also known as pertussis, can make small children and
infants seriously ill and once killed 9,000 people every year. Relatively
benign in adults, whooping cough can cause high fever and pneumonia in
babies.
Now infants routinely receive a combined pertussis, diphtheria and
tetanus vaccine. But immunity wears off by the time a child becomes a
teenager and health officials say whooping cough is on the rise.
Last year, 8,296 cases were reported, the highest number of reported
cases since 1967, said Dr. Gregory Huhn, an epidemiologist with the Illinois
Department of Public Health. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention said 62 young children died of whooping cough in the United
States between 1997 and 2000.
Huhn and the CDC reported on 24 cases of whooping cough among adults
working at an oil refinery in the Chicago area an among people living
nearby.
It is the only vaccine-preventable disease on the rise in the United
States, Huhn said. This means it is important to make sure infants get their
vaccinations on time -- as adults and teens could infect them, Huhn said.
"The important point is that adults are reservoirs for pertussis so any
exposed children, especially those that are not vaccinated and especially
for children below age of 6 weeks, those are extremely vulnerable
populations," Huhn said in a telephone interview.
Before pertussis shots were available, nearly all children developed
whooping cough. In the United States an average of 200,000 cases were
reported every year, with as many as 9,000 deaths. |