• Pertussis, also known as whooping cough, is a highly contagious bacterial illness. It causes a cough that can last several weeks, even months.
  • People can get pertussis at any age. Children who are too young to be fully vaccinated and those who have not received all vaccinations are at highest risk for severe illness.
  • Pertussis is usually spread when an infected person coughs or sneezes, exposing others to infected mucus or droplets.
  • Pertussis usually starts with cold-like symptoms
    • Early symptoms – can last for one to two weeks and usually include runny nose, low-grade fever, occasional cough (may be minimal or absent in infants), apnea — a pause in breathing (in infants)
    • Later symptoms – fits of many, rapid coughs, which empty the lungs, followed by a high-pitched “whoop” when inhaling afterwards, vomiting, exhaustion after coughing fits

o   The coughing fits can go on for up to 10 weeks or more. For teens and adults, especially those who were vaccinated, the “whoop” is often not there, and the infection is generally less severe

  • The vaccine for pertussis is given together with the vaccines for diphtheria and tetanus. There are two vaccines to protect against pertussis:
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      • For children under 7-years-old – diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis vaccine, or DTaP
      • For people aged 7 and older – tetanus-diphtheria-acellular pertussis vaccine, or Tdap