New whooping cough data published
today by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) shows laboratory
confirmed cases rising to over 10,000. UKHSA urges pregnant
women to get vaccinated to protect their babies from birth and
into the first months of their life.
The latest data shows cases of whooping cough peaked in May but
continue at high levels, with 2,427 cases reported in June. This
follows 555 cases in January 2024, increasing to an updated
figure[1] of 3,052 in
May – bringing the total number of laboratory confirmed cases
from January to June 2024 to 10,493.
Confirmed cases in the second quarter (April to June) of 2024 are
very high, exceeding those in any quarter of the last major 2012
outbreak year.
Sadly, there has been one further infant death in June, bringing
the total to 10 since the current outbreak began in November last
year (one in December 2023 and 9 between January to end June
2024).
Young babies are at highest risk of severe complications and
death from whooping cough. Evidence from England shows that
vaccination at the right time in pregnancy is highly effective,
giving 92% protection against infant death.
From January to June 2024, while most cases (55%, 5,769) were in
those aged 15 years or older who usually get a mild illness, high
numbers (328) continue to be reported in babies under 3 months of
age who are at greatest risk from the infection.
Whooping cough cases have been at high levels across all regions
in England, as well as in many other countries, since late 2023
due to a combination of factors. Whooping cough is a cyclical
disease that peaks every 3 to 5 years. The last cyclical increase
occurred in 2016 following an earlier outbreak in 2012. However,
in common with other diseases, cases fell to very low numbers
during the pandemic due to restrictions and public behaviours. A
peak year is overdue and the impact of the pandemic also means
there is reduced immunity to whooping cough in the population.
The latest uptake data for the vaccination offered to pregnant
women to protect newborn infants against whooping cough continues
to decline - with coverage in March 2024 at 58.9% compared to the
peak coverage (72.6%) in March 2017.
Timely vaccination in pregnancy and in childhood are both
important to protect vulnerable young infants from serious
disease. It is particularly important for pregnant women to get
vaccinated against whooping cough, as this allows protection to
pass to their unborn baby in the womb so that babies are
protected from birth in their first months of life.
All babies are given 3 doses of the 6-in-1 jab at 8, 12 and 16
weeks of age to protect against whooping cough and other serious
diseases such as diphtheria and polio, with a pre-school booster
offered at 3 years 4 months.
Dr Mary Ramsay, Director of Immunisation at UK Health Security
Agency, said:
Vaccination is the best defence against whooping cough and it is
vital that pregnant women and young infants receive their
vaccines at the right time. Pregnant women are offered a whooping
cough vaccine in every pregnancy, ideally between 20 and 32
weeks. This passes protection to their baby in the womb so that
they are protected from birth in the first months of their life
when they are most vulnerable and before they can receive their
own vaccines.
With cases continuing to rise and, sadly, 10 infant deaths since
the outbreak began last November, ensuring women are vaccinated
in pregnancy has never been more important. Our thoughts and
condolences are with those families who have so tragically lost
their baby.
Whooping cough, clinically known as pertussis, is a bacterial
infection which affects the lungs. The first signs of infection
are similar to a cold, such as a runny nose and sore throat, but
after about a week, the infection can develop into coughing bouts
that last for a few minutes and are typically worse at
night. Young babies may also make a distinctive ‘whoop' or
have difficulty breathing after a bout of coughing, though not
all babies make this noise which means whooping cough can be hard
to recognise.
If anyone in your family is diagnosed with whooping cough, it's
important they stay at home and do not go into work, school or
nursery until 48 hours after starting antibiotics, or 2 weeks
after symptoms start if they have not had antibiotics. This helps
to prevent the spread of infection, especially to vulnerable
groups, including infants. However, vaccination remains the best
protection for babies and children.
[1] Case numbers
are published on a provisional basis. They can either increase as
further test results are finalised or decrease when cases tested
through antibody levels are subsequently found to be possibly as
a result of antibodies from vaccination rather than disease.