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PERTUSSIS - USA (UTAH)

> **********************

> A ProMED-mail post

> <http://www.healthnet.org/programs/promed.html

>

> [see also:

> Pertussis - USA (Idaho) 971010235214]

>

> Date: Sat, 12 Sep 1998 18:25:00 -0400

> Source: Deseret News

> Via: A. on <grobertson@...

>

> ************

> 50 cases confirmed; hundreds of people showing symptoms

> Last updated 09/11/1998, 11:43 a.m. MT

> ************

>

> An outbreak of whooping cough has hit Utah, health department officials

> said Friday. Fifty cases have been confirmed and hundreds more people are

> showing symptoms of the infectious respiratory disease pertussis, commonly

> known as whooping cough.

>

> , deputy director of the Utah Department of Health, said 50

> Utah people have been diagnosed with whooping cough since January. In the

> last few months, seven new cases have been reported in four different parts

> of the state, leading health officials to call attention to the matter.

> " When you get a few people exposed, those people can expose other people.

> It's kind of this geometric expansion, " said. " Pretty soon you

> have enough exposure that the second wave of cases starts to occur. "

>

> Ages of those diagnosed range from a newborn to age 55 and they've occurred

> in Utah, Salt Lake, Summit and Washington counties in the past month. In

> Salt Lake County alone, 29 cases of whooping cough have been confirmed and

> 277 other people have been exposed, said Vedder, executive director

> of the Salt Lake City-County Health Department. " We're very concerned, "

> Vedder said Friday. " Adults are all susceptible to pertussis and are

> actually going to be spreading the disease to the children. "

>

> Children under 2 who are not immunized are most vulnerable to the disease,

> which can cause pneumonia, brain damage and death. In the past six weeks,

> two infants have been hospitalized at Primary Children's Medical Center

> with whooping cough, said. Utah ties with Idaho for last place

> among states for pre-school immunizations among 2-year-olds. Whooping cough

> in children can be prevented by a series of shots given at 2, 4, 6 and 15

> months and again when the child enters school. Because the vaccinations

> wear off after five to 10 years, adults and adolescents immunized as

> infants can catch whooping cough and pass it along to others. Adult

> symptoms are usually less severe. The contagious stage of the disease is

> shortened by treatment with antibiotics, said.

>

> Health officials are urging Utahns with a persistent cough to see a

> physician immediately. Other symptoms include runny nose, sneezing and a

> low-grade fever. There may also be vomiting and the symptoms last four to

> six weeks. " We really want to identify those people, so we can get them on

> antibiotics and keep them from spreading it around, " said.

> Whooping cough has been a problem throughout the Intermountain West, Vedder

> said, though health officials don't know why. Idaho has been especially

> hard hit. Vedder said the number of recent cases led her, and

> other health department directors to meet this week and decide to call the

> situation an outbreak and start informing the public. " Anybody with a

> persistent cough or anybody whose children have persistent coughs and are

> not immunized needs to immediately call their physician, " Vedder said.

>

> Cases of pertussis in 1998 include: Salt Lake County, 29; Utah County, 12;

> Summit, , Tooele and the Southwest Utah Public Health Department

> (Beaver, Iron, Garfield, Washington and Kane counties), 2 each;

> Weber/ area, 1.

>

> [Written by: Cala Byram]

>

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> ProMED-mail

> e-mail: promed@...

> ......................................es

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> Send all items for posting to: promed@... (NOT to an

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> it may not be posted. Send commands to subscribe/unsubscribe, get archives,

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>

> PERTUSSIS - USA (UTAH) (02)

> ***************************

> A ProMED-mail post

> <http://www.healthnet.org/programs/promed.html

>

> [see also:

> Pertussis - USA (Utah) 980913101922]

>

> Date: Mon, 14 Sep 1998 16:30:25 -0700

> From: DeBolt, Chas <Chas.DeBolt@...

>

> I am writing to remark about the following language in the 9/13/98

> Pertussis USA (Utah) posting [980913101922 cited above]:

>

> " Whooping cough in children can be prevented by a series of shots given at

> 2, 4, 6 and 15 months and again when the child enters school. Because the

> vaccinations wear off after five to 10 years, adults and adolescents

> immunized as infants can catch whooping cough and pass it along to others. "

>

> This is what many health care providers believe, and therefore, they think

> immunized children cannot get whooping cough. I sometimes feel like a

> snake-oil salesman trying to convince the providers to take the situation

> seriously if the kids have had the shots! Even after I have phoned ahead

> to let the provider know that a child has had face to face exposure with a

> culture-confirmed case in the past 21 days, they may check the immunization

> record and simply tell the parent not to worry (because immunizations are

> current).

>

> We must be careful about the language we use. Changing the health care

> community's understanding of whooping cough in a highly immunized

> population is an arduous task for those of us who deal with it daily. I

> sometimes find the lay public more open to the current epidemiology of

> pertussis than some doctors and nurses. This immunization is not like

> measles vaccine, where 95% of those receiving the vaccine develop measles

> IgG and are then immune to measles.

>

> As an example, prophylactic antibiotics for an asymptomatic immunized child

> with a known exposure can be important. Pertussis in an immunized child

> can present as a few days of cold symptoms with a slight night cough. But

> they may still be contagious. The immunized child could expose an infant

> too young for immunization. And that infant could die from pertussis

> disease.

>

> - --

> Chas De Bolt, RN MPH

> Vaccine-preventable diseases epidemiologist

> Prevention division

> Seattle King County Department of Public Health

> 999 Third Avenue, Suite 900

> Seattle, Washington 98104-4099

> Phone: (206) 296-4774

> Fax: (206) 296-4803

> e-mail: chas.debolt@...

> ......................................es

> - --

> Send all items for posting to: promed@... (NOT to an

> individual moderator). If you do not give your full name and affiliation,

> it may not be posted. Send commands to subscribe/unsubscribe, get archives,

> help, etc. to: majordomo@.... For assistance from a human

> being, send mail to: owner-promed@...

>

>

>

> --

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