Whooping Cough (Pertussis) - Queensland Health
Access keys | Skip to primary navigation | Skip to secondary navigation | Skip to content | Skip to footer |
Problems viewing this site

Queensland Health

WWW Banner

Topic: Whooping Cough (Pertussis)

Description

Whooping cough (or pertussis) is a highly contagious respiratory infection caused by bacteria. It can affect babies, children and adults.  For adolescents and adults the infection may only be a persistent cough, however for young children whooping cough can be life threatening. The cough can obstruct a baby’s breathing and they may lack oxygen and become blue.

Symptoms

Whooping cough may start like a cold, with a runny nose and sneezing, and then the characteristic cough develops. These coughing bouts can be very severe and frightening, and may end with a crowing noise (the whoop). This occurs as air is drawn back into the chest, and can be followed by vomiting or gagging.  In young infants, as well as older children and adults, the typical symptoms may not be present.

After exposure to the bacteria, it usually takes nine to ten days to become ill.

Transmission

The bacteria are spread by an infected person coughing or sneezing.  Direct contact with infected secretions from the mouth or nose can also pass on the infection.

A person is highly infectious for the first two weeks of their cough. After three weeks of coughing, the person is regarded as non-infectious, even though coughing may last up to three months.

Treatment

Treatment is a full course of antibiotics which reduces the time a person is infectious to others. Antibiotics need to be given within 21 days of the start of general symptoms or within 14 days of the start of the cough. Antibiotics reduce symptoms if given when infection is developing, after contact with a person with pertussis and in the early coughing stage.

Not all people who have close contact with an infected person with whooping cough need treatment. However, because infants are at a higher risk of severe complications if they develop whooping cough, a full course of antibiotics is recommended for the following people in the same house as a person with whooping cough (if the infected person has been coughing less than 21 days).  This includes:

If a child with whooping cough attends childcare and belongs to the infant group (less than 12 months of age), the other infants in that group should be given antibiotics if the infected child has been coughing less than 14 days.

Control

A person with whooping cough should stay away from work, school and child-care until they have had full course of antibiotics, or until 21 days after the beginning of the coughing or until the end of coughing, which ever comes first.

Household contacts, who have received less than three doses of whooping cough vaccine, should be excluded from child-care centres until they have taken a full course of antibiotics or for 14 days after the last exposure to infection.

Prevention

Whooping cough can be prevented by vaccination. The whooping cough (pertussis) vaccine is combined together with diphtheria, tetanus and inactivated poliomyelitis vaccine (DTPa-IPV).  

 DTPa-IPV vaccine is recommended and provided free for:

The protection provided by childhood vaccination gradually reduces over time, leaving adolescents and adults potentially at risk of catching the disease.  An adult-adolescent whooping cough vaccine, combined with diphtheria and tetanus vaccine (dTpa), is now available.

A single booster dose of dTpa is recommended and provided free for:

A single booster dose of dTpa is recommended, but not funded for:

Help and Assistance

For further information please contact your local doctor, community health centre, nearest population health unit or contact the 13HEALTH information line (13 432584).

Other Resources and Related Content

Immunise Australia website

Protect your baby from whooping cough (brochure)

Whooping cough and immunisation fact sheet

Free whooping cough vaccine for new parents

References

Heymann, D., ed. 2004.  Control of Communicable Diseases Manual, 18th edition.  Washington, DC: American Public Health Association.

National Health and Medical Research Council, 2003. The Australian Immunisation Handbook (9th Ed.)   Canberra: National Capital Printing.


Last Updated: 12th October, 2009
Date Valid to: 30th June, 2010





Options