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Family Health Magazine
CHILDHOOD

Whooping Cough
Immunization makes a difference

Preventing Whooping Cough

  • Whooping cough poses serious health risks to young babies,
    so make sure your baby is vaccinated on schedule starting at the age of two months.
    Call your public health office to set up a time for your baby's shots.
  • A single booster dose is offered to teens in school-based programs. If your teenager missed the program, schedule
    a vaccination.
  • Your health care provider can suggest ways to treat minor side effects of shots including mild fever and tenderness.
  • Ask for a written immunization record of your child's shots.
    Keep it in a safe place at home where you can find it easily.
    If your child is exposed to anyone with whooping cough, check the record right away. Seek immediate medical attention if shots are not up to date.
  • Even if your child has had whooping cough, continue with the complete series of five shots. Pertussis immunization is the best way to protect children from serious complications if they become infected again.
  • See your health care provider if anyone in your household has a cough lasting longer than a week. Accurate diagnosis is important. Anyone with whooping cough should get antibiotic treatment and avoid close contact with babies and young children while still contagious.

It can be difficult to watch as your small baby or child receives an immunization. However, the illness and complications such vaccinations protect against are much harder to tolerate. Whooping cough (pertussis) is one disease we take the trouble to immunize against during the first six months of life. It is the most frequently reported, vaccine-preventable disease in Canada.

What causes whooping cough?

Whooping cough can infect the respiratory tract any time of year. It is caused by Bordetella pertussis bacteria, which spread through droplets in the air when an infected person coughs or sneezes. Direct contact with infected fluid from someone’s nose or throat can also transmit the disease.
Whooping cough easily spreads among family members, in schools, and anywhere people are in close contact.

In general, a person stays infectious from the beginning of infection to three weeks after coughing begins. If antibiotics are used, the period of infectiousness lasts only five days after the start of treatment.

Although anyone can get whooping cough, even more than once, the effects are usually much worse for babies. Older members of a household may have whooping cough without realizing it. This can pose serious risks to younger children and babies who are not vaccinated or have not received enough vaccine.

What are the symptoms?

Symptoms begin six to 20 days after someone becomes infected. It may start with common cold-like symptoms, including a runny nose, mild fever, and cough, but often turns into a series of severe coughing spells that can continue from six to 12 weeks. The disease gets its name from the whooping sound people often make as they try to catch their breath after a coughing spell.

Why is it more dangerous for babies and small children?

A baby under the age of 12 months can be more seriously affected by and likely to have complications from whooping cough than those in other age groups. Complications for babies can include vomiting after a coughing spell, weight loss, breathing problems, choking spells, pneumonia, convulsions, brain damage, and, in rare cases, death. Currently in Canada, whooping cough kills one to three babies per year, usually those who are not vaccinated or have not received enough vaccine.

In older children, teens and adults, the disease is less serious and complications are rare. The only sign of infection may be a persistent cough lasting more than a week. Since it is often not diagnosed in older age groups, they can be sources of infection for younger children.

The best way to protect your baby against whooping cough is to immunize with the pertussis vaccine at two, four and six months of age. Booster doses should be given at 18 months and between four and six years of age, the preschool years. It is important that young babies start their pertussis vaccination without delay at two months of age.

You can also help keep your baby healthy by avoiding contact with those who are sick. Anyone of any age who has a cough or cold symptoms should stay away from young babies.

Does vaccination really help?

Before the pertussis vaccine was introduced in the ‘40s, whooping cough was a major cause of serious illness and death among babies and young children. However, it has declined dramatically since a widespread pertussis immunization program was introduced in Canada. All Canadian residents can be vaccinated for free, as part of the publicly funded routine immunization schedule. It is usually given as a needle shot in combination with other routine vaccines.

Has the pertussis vaccine changed?

The number of Canadian teens and adults diagnosed with whooping cough has been rising since the early ‘90s. This may be partly due to the fact that protection provided by the older (whole cell) pertussis vaccine tends to fade over time. However, even with the recent increase in reported cases, there are far fewer cases of whooping cough than they once were.

The older version of the pertussis vaccine was used in children under the age of seven until the mid-‘90s. Then, the current (acellular) pertussis vaccine was introduced in Canada. It is very safe, and licensed for use in children, teens and adults. Almost anyone can take it, apart from those who had trouble breathing or severe swelling of the skin or mouth when they received it earlier.
Some people may have swelling or tenderness at the injection site, while others may develop a mild fever. These reactions are minor and temporary, and serious side effects are extremely rare. The benefits of the vaccine far outweigh the slight risk of a reaction. If a vaccinated child does get whooping cough, the effect will be much milder thanks to protection from the pertussis vaccine.

At what point should vaccinations be done?

Babies and children

Parents are urged to make sure their children complete all the current pertussis vaccine doses on time starting at two, four, and six months of age, with booster doses at 18 months and four and six years of age.

Teens and adults

The older pertussis vaccine was only used in children under age seven, since the severity of local reactions increased with age. However, the current vaccine is safe for teens and adults.

Any teenager who has not received the current pertussis vaccine should get a single booster dose in a school-based program or from a health care provider, usually at 14 years of age. The same is recommended for adults who have not received it. In addition to directly protecting teens and adults, pertussis immunization helps keep babies safe too.

Thanks to immunization, we have the ability to reduce or eliminate this serious disease. For more information about this and other vaccines, speak to your family doctor or a public health nurse.

FAMILY HEALTH is written
with the assistance of
College of Family Physicans of Canada
Alberta College of Family Physicians
While effort is made to reflect accepted medical knowledge and practice, articles in Family Health Online should not be relied upon for the treatment or management of any specified medical problem or concern and Family Health accepts no liability for reliance on the articles. For proper diagnosis and care, you should always consult your family physician promptly. © Copyright 2012, Family Health Magazine, a special publication of the Edmonton Journal, a division of Postmedia Network Inc., 10006 - 101 Street, Edmonton, AB T5J 2S6    [CH_FHb06]
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