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Tag: pertussis

  • Texas reports the most cases of whooping cough in decades

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    A nurse from the Ecuadorean Ministry of Health vaccinates a person against whooping cough in Guayaquil, Ecuador on May 8, 2025.  (Photo by MARCOS PIN / AFP) (Photo by MARCOS PIN/AFP via Getty Images)

    A nurse from the Ecuadorean Ministry of Health vaccinates a person against whooping cough in Guayaquil, Ecuador on May 8, 2025. (Photo by MARCOS PIN / AFP) (Photo by MARCOS PIN/AFP via Getty Images)

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    Texas reported more cases of whooping cough last year than anytime in the last 66 years, according to provisional data from the state health department.

    This peak comes as vaccination rates among children continue to decline.

    There were 4,120 cases of whooping cough in 2025, according to provisional data from the Department of State Health Services. That’s the most cases since 2013, when the state reported 3,985 cases. The 2013 peak was the most cases since 1959, said Lara Anton, spokesperson for the state health department.

    The rate of Texas kindergartners up-to-date on their DTaP vaccines, which protect against diphtheria and tetanus as well as whooping cough, dropped from almost 97% to 93% between 2019 and 2024, according to state data.

    Whooping cough is caused by bacteria known as pertussis. The bacteria cause an annoying illness in most healthy adults, and is sometimes known as the “100 day cough” for the length of time the illness persists. But in young children, the disease can be quite serious. One in three infants it infects need to be hospitalized, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About 1% of infants die from complications of the disease.

    “The younger you are, the more at risk you are for a severe infection with pertussis,” said Dr. Robert Frenck, a professor of pediatrics in the division of infectious diseases at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, adding that the bacteria can prevent infants from breathing because it causes so much coughing.

    Pertussis outbreaks are common in the U.S. because immunity tends to fade about seven to 10 years after you’ve been infected, or about five years after you’ve been vaccinated, said Frenck, who is also the director of the Vaccine Research Center at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital. But outbreaks have become larger and more common as vaccination coverage has dropped in the U.S. and in Texas, said Frenck and Dr. James Cherry, a professor of pediatrics at UCLA.

    “If we use the vaccines properly, the way they’re recommended, and in particular, see that pregnant women get vaccinated, you can prevent virtually all deaths [from pertussis],” Cherry said.

    In Tarrant County, there were 483 cases of whooping cough reported, according to data from the county health department.

    The state health department issued a health alert because of the high number of pertussis cases, the second year in a row the department has done so.

    Frenck said he expected outbreaks to continue if vaccination continues to wane throughout the U.S.

    “The worst case scenario that we could have in the United States is that we stop vaccinating,” he said.

    In addition to outbreaks of pertussis, 2025 saw multiple outbreaks of measles throughout the U.S. Measles is the most contagious vaccine-preventable disease. In Texas, a measles outbreak infected 762 people, and killed two children.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Ciara McCarthy

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Ciara McCarthy covers health and wellness as part of the Star-Telegram’s Crossroads Lab. She came to Fort Worth after three years in Victoria, Texas, where she worked at the Victoria Advocate. Ciara is focused on equipping people and communities with information they need to make decisions about their lives and well-being. Please reach out with your questions about public health or the health care system. Email cmccarthy@star-telegram.com or call or text 817-203-4391.

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  • Trump administration slashes number of diseases U.S. children will be regularly vaccinated against

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    The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced sweeping changes to the pediatric vaccine schedule on Monday, sharply cutting the number of diseases U.S. children will be regularly immunized against.

    Under the new guidelines, the U.S. still recommends that all children be vaccinated against measles, mumps, rubella, polio, pertussis, tetanus, diphtheria, Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib), pneumococcal disease, human papillomavirus (HPV) and varicella, better known as chickenpox.

    Vaccines for all other diseases will now fall into one of two categories: recommended only for specific high-risk groups, or available through “shared clinical decision-making” — the administration’s preferred term for “optional.”

    These include immunizations for hepatitis A and B, rotavirus, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), bacterial meningitis, influenza and COVID-19. All these shots were previously recommended for all children.

    Insurance companies will still be required to fully cover all childhood vaccines on the CDC schedule, including those now designated as optional, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.

    Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a longtime vaccine critic, said in a statement that the new schedule “protects children, respects families, and rebuilds trust in public health.”

    But pediatricians and public health officials widely condemned the shift, saying that it would lead to more uncertainty for patients and a resurgence of diseases that had been under control.

    “The decision to weaken the childhood immunization schedule is misguided and dangerous,” said Dr. René Bravo, a pediatrician and president of the California Medical Assn. “Today’s decision undermines decades of evidence-based public health policy and sends a deeply confusing message to families at a time when vaccine confidence is already under strain.”

    The American Academy of Pediatrics condemned the changes as “dangerous and unnecessary,” and said that it will continue to publish its own schedule of recommended immunizations. In September, California, Oregon, Washington and Hawaii announced that those four states would follow an independent immunization schedule based on recommendations from the AAP and other medical groups.

    The federal changes have been anticipated since December, when President Trump signed a presidential memorandum directing the health department to update the pediatric vaccine schedule “to align with such scientific evidence and best practices from peer, developed countries.”

    The new U.S. vaccination guidelines are much closer to those of Denmark, which routinely vaccinates its children against only 10 diseases.

    As doctors and public health experts have pointed out, Denmark also has a robust system of government-funded universal healthcare, a smaller and more homogenous population, and a different disease burden.

    “The vaccines that are recommended in any particular country reflect the diseases that are prevalent in that country,” said Dr. Kelly Gebo, dean of the Milken Institute School of Public Health at George Washington University. “Just because one country has a vaccine schedule that is perfectly reasonable for that country, it may not be at all reasonable” elsewhere.

    Almost every pregnant woman in Denmark is screened for hepatitis B, for example. In the U.S., less than 85% of pregnant women are screened for the disease.

    Instead, the U.S. has relied on universal vaccination to protect children whose mothers don’t receive adequate care during pregnancy. Hepatitis B has been nearly eliminated in the U.S. since the vaccine was introduced in 1991. Last month, a panel of Kennedy appointees voted to drop the CDC’s decades-old recommendation that all newborns be vaccinated against the disease at birth.

    “Viruses and bacteria that were under control are being set free on our most vulnerable,” said Dr. James Alwine, a virologist and member of the nonprofit advocacy group Defend Public Health. “It may take one or two years for the tragic consequences to become clear, but this is like asking farmers in North Dakota to grow pineapples. It won’t work and can’t end well.”

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  • Oregon Reports Record-High Pertussis Cases, Health Officials Urge Vaccination – KXL

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    PORTLAND, Ore. — Oregon has recorded its highest number of pertussis cases ever, prompting state health officials to urge residents—especially those who are pregnant or spend time around infants—to ensure they are up to date on vaccinations.

    As of Dec. 10, the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) has confirmed 1,475 pertussis cases in 2025, surpassing the previous annual record of 1,420 set in 1950. The current outbreak began in spring 2024, when cases climbed to 1,252 by the end of the year. Several other states have reported similar increases.

    Infants Most at Risk

    Pertussis, or whooping cough, can cause severe illness at any age, but infants face the greatest risk of hospitalization and death. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that pregnant individuals receive a Tdap vaccine during the third trimester to provide newborns with protection until they can be vaccinated at two months old. Adults who will spend time around a newborn—such as partners, grandparents and caregivers—are also encouraged to get vaccinated at least two weeks before the baby’s birth.

    Vaccination remains important across all age groups. Tdap is recommended for pregnant people, children beginning at 2 months old, adolescents at 11–12, and adults who have never received a dose.

    “I worry people may not fully appreciate the risk pertussis poses as case counts are rising, especially for babies and older adults,” said Dr. Howard Chiou, medical director for communicable diseases and immunizations at OHA. He noted that maternal vaccination rates in Oregon have declined in recent years.

    Declining Immunization Rates

    According to OHA’s new Pregnancy Immunization Data dashboard, 69% of pregnant people in Oregon received a Tdap vaccine in 2024, down from 72% in 2020. Rates vary widely by county, ranging from 17% to 82%, with the lowest numbers largely in rural areas where access and vaccine hesitancy pose barriers.

    So far in 2025, Oregon has reported 87 cases of pertussis in infants under 12 months, including 22 hospitalizations. One infant in the state has died from the illness this year.

    A Post-Pandemic Surge

    Pertussis outbreaks typically occur every three to five years, but case numbers dropped sharply during the COVID-19 pandemic, when masking and social distancing limited the spread of many respiratory infections. Oregon saw just three cases in 2021, followed by 17 in 2022 and 40 in 2023. Health officials attribute the resurgence to a return to pre-pandemic behaviors combined with waning immunity and reduced vaccination rates.

    Why Vaccination Still Matters

    Studies show that Tdap vaccination during pregnancy is highly effective at preventing severe illness and hospitalization in infants. But because immunity fades over time, some residents misunderstand the need for booster doses, said Dr. Carolina Amador, Benton County’s health officer.

    “When we use the word ‘booster,’ people may think the vaccine isn’t very effective because protection fades,” Amador said. “But in the short term it does a great job protecting the most vulnerable among us.”

    The Disease and Its Diagnosis

    Pertussis spreads through respiratory droplets when an infected person coughs or sneezes. Many cases go undiagnosed because symptoms vary widely, and not everyone develops the characteristic “whooping” sound.

    Dr. Jennifer Gibbons, a naturopathic pediatrician in Portland who works with vaccine-hesitant families, said she often counsels expectant parents about the importance of maternal vaccination.

    “When parents ask me, ‘Do you think it’s right for me?’ the answer is always yes,” she said. Gibbons described whooping cough in infants as “truly awful,” and said explaining how maternal antibodies work can help parents better understand the benefits.

    OHA has posted videos of Dr. Chiou discussing the outbreak on its Media Resources page.

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    Jordan Vawter

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  • Whooping cough cases on the rise: symptoms, treatment

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    It’s highly infectious and definitely not a welcome Thanksgiving guest.

    Pertussis, also known as whooping cough, is on the rise with outbreaks across the country, leaving some parents of infants wondering whether they should travel or visit family at all.

    Pertussis is a bacterial respiratory infection characterized by the “whoop” sound made by sharp intakes of breath between coughing fits. Infected adults and kids can develop a brutal, weekslong cough. Sick infants are at risk of dying. 

    Vaccination offers strong protection against disease, but immunity wanes over time and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data show fewer children are getting the vaccine. The CDC recommends adults get a Tdap booster shot every 10 years.

    Infections dropped nationally during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2024, cases surged. This year, infections are similarly high. As of Nov. 19, preliminary data showed more than 25,000 cases nationwide in 2025. The states of Washington, California, Florida and Oregon have been hardest hit. 

    Heading into the holidays, what are the symptoms to watch for, who is most at risk and who needs to get vaccinated?

    Symptoms to be on the lookout for

    Whooping cough symptoms progress in stages, and the disease’s severity can depend on a person’s vaccination status.

    Symptoms usually appear within five to 10 days after exposure, but they can also take twice as long to develop. 

    During the first one to two weeks, symptoms often resemble an average cold: a mild cough, a low-grade fever and a runny nose. Although the symptoms might seem innocuous, a person is contagious during this stage.

    The second, more severe stage can last up to 10 weeks. The main symptom is intense coughing fits, called paroxysms, that can lead to vomiting. The cough ends with an intake of breath that sounds like a “whoop.”

    “Sometimes the coughing is so severe that ribs are cracked,” said Dr. Joseph Bocchini, a pediatric infectious disease doctor at Willis-Knighton Health. “There’s such shortness of breath that people wake up at night with a coughing spell, they feel like they’re suffocating.”

    Pneumonia is another possible complication. 

    People who have never been vaccinated are likely to experience worse symptoms than their vaccinated peers, Bocchini said. 

    Recovery is often gradual as the cough wanes. As a person recovers, they can be more vulnerable to contracting other respiratory infections, and the cough might return

    Getting sick confers natural immunity from the disease for a time, but that protection doesn’t last long.  

    Infections happen year-round, but peak whooping cough season lasts from late summer through fall. Pertussis is a cyclical disease, meaning it might spread widely through a community and then disappear from that population. Infections might return to an area once that immunity has waned.

    What causes the cough?

    The bacteria Bordetella pertussis causes the coughing. 

    The bacteria enter a person’s upper respiratory tract and latch on to cilia, hair-like extensions in the airways. Cilia are essential for clearing mucus and debris from your lungs. The bacteria release a toxin that damages the cilia and causes the airway to swell. With a person’s lung-cleaning apparatus damaged, the body resorts to coughing to get the gunk out. 

    If one person in a household is infected, data shows about 80% of exposed family members also will get infected, if they aren’t vaccinated or immune. 

    Pertussis spreads through droplets when someone sneezes or coughs. 

    How is whooping cough treated? 

    Doctors use nasal swab lab tests to identify infections. 

    Antibiotics are the most effective treatment, especially when taken early in the illness. If taken before the coughing fits begin, antibiotics can prevent the illness from progressing or make symptoms milder.

    That’s why doctors sometimes prescribe antibiotics to the infected person’s family and other contacts: to halt further spread. 

    Once the coughing fits have begun, antibiotics are less effective at reducing symptoms or shortening the course of the illness. The cilia have already been damaged, and the lungs need time to heal.

    Antibiotics are still prescribed at that stage because a five-day course kills the bacteria, making the person no longer contagious, even if the cough persists.  

    To manage symptoms, the CDC advises using a cool-mist humidifier, eating small meals to prevent vomiting and drinking plenty of fluids. The agency also recommends avoiding airway irritants such as dust, smoke or chemical fumes that might trigger coughing.

    Some pertussis cases require hospitalization. 

    Young babies are most at risk

    Whooping cough is most dangerous for babies under 1 year old, especially under 3 months. The CDC reports that 1 in 3 infected babies will need hospital treatment. About 1% of infected babies die from complications, such as pneumonia, damage in the brain or difficulty breathing.  

    Infants with pertussis sometimes don’t cough at all, but have dangerous pauses in breathing called apnea. Babies may turn blue as they struggle to breathe. 

    Older people, people who are immunocompromised and people with moderate to severe asthma also could be at higher risk of complications. 

    DTaP and Tdap vaccines can protect against illness 

    Scientists first developed a pertussis vaccine in 1914. In the 1940s, it became part of a combination vaccine that also protects against diphtheria and tetanus. It’s still combined with those today. 

    Two vaccines protect against whooping cough: DTaP, given to young children, and Tdap, given to adolescents, adults and pregnant women.

    Vaccination doesn’t stop the bacteria from entering a person’s body, but it helps stop an infection from developing. Among the minority of vaccinated people who do get sick, vaccination decreases the illness’ severity. 

    The CDC’s childhood vaccine schedule recommends that babies get their first dose of the DTaP vaccine at 2 months old. The vaccine is delivered in four more doses at 4 months, 6 months, between 15 and 18 months and between 4 and 6 years.

    “Just like we practice baseball or piano with many games of catch or lessons, providing multiple doses gives our immune system additional practice,” said Dr. Lori Handy, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. “The vaccine schedule is designed to give enough practice to our system that eventually, the person is adequately protected.”

    Vaccinated children are much less likely than unvaccinated children to get sick with pertussis. 

    During the 2024-2025 school year, 92.1% of kindergarteners received a DTaP vaccine, down from about 95% in the decade before the pandemic.

    Protection from the vaccine wanes over time, which is why we have the Tdap booster vaccine. The CDC recommended preteens get one dose, and adults get a shot every 10 years. Adults can infect children, so staying up to date is important for the little ones in your life. 

    The CDC also recommends pregnant women receive a Tdap booster between the 27th and  36th week of pregnancy, regardless of when they were last vaccinated. “Vaccination of pregnant moms provides immunity to newborn babies, so that they are protected at the time when they are most at risk of deadly disease,” Handy said. 

    How can I stay safe over the holidays? 

    “Far and away, the most important thing is to be vaccinated and be up to date,” Bocchini said. And if you have a small baby, make sure the people around the baby are also vaccinated and up to date. 

    Other strategies are basic: Wash your hands often. Use good cough etiquette. Teach these habits to your kids.

    Since the bacteria spreads through coughs and sneezes, wearing a mask can help slow the spread, whether you are infected or around someone who is. 

    If you think you might have been exposed, you can ask your doctor to test you. In its initial stage, whooping cough is hard to distinguish from other respiratory infections, Bocchini advised patients to ask themselves how they might have been exposed: Have I been around someone with a persistent cough that happens in fits? Although it may be hard, it’s safest to stay home when you are sick.

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  • The whooping cough vaccine works, doctors say

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    Days after announcing a push to end Florida’s school vaccine mandates, state Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo questioned the whooping cough vaccine’s effectiveness.

    In a Sept. 7 interview on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Ladapo told host Jake Tapper that his department didn’t study how ending the vaccine requirements could affect children’s health or future outbreaks.

    “Absolutely not,” Ladapo responded, before referring to whooping cough vaccines. “That’s an example of a vaccine that is ineffective. The data show that it’s ineffective at preventing transmission.”

    Pertussis, or whooping cough, is a highly contagious bacterial infection that can cause uncontrollable coughing fits. Its common name comes from the sound of infected infants and children make when they try to catch their breath in between coughs.

    Like many vaccines, the DTaP vaccine — which stands for diphtheria, tetanus and acellular pertussis — is not a perfect barrier, but it significantly lowers the risk of severe disease.

    The DTaP vaccine is 98% effective in children within a year of their last dose, and about 71% effective five years after the last dose, according to guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    “The core misunderstanding here is making perfect the enemy of the good,” said Dr. Christoph Diasio, a pediatrician at Sandhills Pediatrics in North Carolina. “We would love a 100% perfect magic shield against pertussis — the vaccine protection does wane, it’s not perfect — but that doesn’t mean that it is useless. It is much much better to get protection from the vaccine rather than to be totally vulnerable to a disease so terrible you can break ribs.”

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    The acellular pertussis vaccine used in the U.S. since the 1990s is less effective at preventing transmission than its whole-cell predecessor, studies have shown. But widespread vaccination — which school vaccine mandates are based on — reduces overall transmission by lowering the number of susceptible people. 

    “The whole-cell pertussis vaccine, while more effective, also caused more side effects because it had more antigens in it,” Dr. Jason Terk, a pediatrician at Cook Children’s Health Care System in Texas, said. “The 5 cents of truth in his statement relates to it being comparatively less effective than what we used to use.”

    Emily Oster, a health economist and founder of ParentData, said Ladapo’s statement about the vaccine’s effectiveness regarding transmission is “broadly” true, but noted that the rationale for school vaccination rules is that viruses have trouble getting a foothold when more people are vaccinated.

    “The vaccine is very protective against infection in individuals,” Oster wrote by email. “Yes, it is true that if someone DID get infected they might pass it along, but if the virus is constantly running into people with vaccination, it will die.”

    PolitiFact reached out to Florida’s health department about Ladapo’s comment but did not hear back by publication.

    How the vaccine works 

    Whooping cough can be extremely serious in babies and young children, causing vomiting, pneumonia, convulsions, apnea, brain damage or death. Infants can turn blue during coughing spells because of lack of oxygen. In teens and adults, the disease can cause weight loss, bladder control loss and passing out. Severe coughing can cause rib fractures.

    Doctors typically administer the combination DTaP vaccine in five doses to patients from infancy through early childhood to help build up immunity and ensure protection doesn’t fade. Different vaccines against the diseases are available for older children, adolescents and adults.

    Before pertussis vaccines became available in the 1940s, the condition was one of the more common childhood diseases in the U.S. Each year, as many as 200,000 children got sick and around 9,000 died, according to the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases.

    Once the vaccine came to market, case numbers decreased through the 1980s by more than 90% compared with the pre-vaccine era.

    A vaccine shift over safety 

    In the 1990s, the U.S. switched to an acellular vaccine, which contains fragments of a pathogen, because it had fewer side effects and still provided coverage. (Whole-cell versions contain the entire pathogen.)

    After pertussis cases began to increase gradually in the early 2000s, researchers looked into the cause and found that the acellular vaccine is not as protective as the previous whole-cell version, with some evidence that the immune response wanes more quickly. (As a result, an additional dose is now recommended around 11 and 12 years old.)

    There could be other factors that explain the uptick: The disease is more quickly detected and recognized, patients have greater access to laboratory diagnostics, and surveillance and health department reporting is stronger.

    Some studies have also shown families increasingly using school vaccination exemptions or declining routine vaccines.

    “The easier it is to get non-medical exemptions, the greater the number of unvaccinated children will be, increasing the likelihood of pertussis outbreaks in schools and communities,” Richard Gilligan, the former director of the Clinical Microbiology-Immunology Laboratories at the University of North Carolina Hospitals, wrote in a 2022 analysis. “School age students can bring this highly contagious organism home and infect non-boosted parents and unvaccinated siblings, especially infants.”

    Oster also referred to research that found states that offer personal belief exemptions, and more easily granted exemptions, were associated with increased whooping cough cases. In Florida, parents can exempt their children from vaccine mandates on medical or religious grounds.

    In his report, Gilligan also pointed to the emergence of new pertussis strains, which can result in vaccinated people becoming infected but remaining asymptomatic and able to transmit the disease.

    One 2022 paper that looked at different pertussis immunization practices around the world said that selecting which vaccine to use should be weighed against effectiveness, likelihood of adverse events, cost and pertussis surveillance in the community.

    “The vaccine lessens transmission, it doesn’t eliminate it, just like influenza, RSV, rotavirus vaccines — they lessen transmission,” said Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. “With SARS-CoV-2, (the virus that causes COVID-19), which is similar, if you lived in a highly vaccinated area, you were much less likely to get the disease even if you weren’t vaccinated.”

    Ultimately, health officials decided that the safety benefits of the acellular pertussis vaccine outweighed the more effective, more reactive whole-cell version. It still offered protection, they said, particularly in shared spaces like schools, when most children were vaccinated.

    “There have been no serious safety signals in the 30 years since the DTaP vaccination has been on the market,” Terk, the Texas pediatrician, said.

    In Florida, the school requirement for the DTaP vaccine for will stay put for now. The state health department told The Associated Press it submitted a rule change Sept. 3 to remove vaccine requirements for chickenpox, hepatitis B, Haemophilus influenza type b (Hib), and pneumococcal diseases for schoolchildren. That’s expected to go into effect around December 2025.

    Other vaccines, such as those for measles, polio and whooping cough will require legislative action to be removed. Florida lawmakers aren’t scheduled to meet again until January 2026.

    RELATED:  Every school vaccine mandate “drips” with “slavery.”

    RELATED: Do pediatricians recommend vaccines to make a profit? There’s not much money there. 

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