logo
Whooping cough is surging. Here's what you can do to protect yourself.

Whooping cough is surging. Here's what you can do to protect yourself.

Yahoo10-05-2025
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
Whooping cough, a bacterial infection that can be especially dangerous for babies and young children, is on the rise. Already in 2025 the U.S. has recorded 8,485 cases. That's compared with 4,266 cases during the same period in 2024.
Like measles, which is also spreading at unprecedented levels, whooping cough, more formally known as pertussis, can be prevented by a safe and effective vaccine. But with anti-vaccine sentiment increasing and cuts to immunization services, vaccination rates for whooping cough over the past two years have declined in children.
The Conversation asked epidemiologist Annette Regan to explain why pertussis has become so prevalent and how families can protect themselves from the disease.
Pertussis is a vaccine-preventable disease caused by the bacterium Bordetella pertussis. Researchers in France first identified the B. pertussis bacterium in 1906. The first recorded epidemic of pertussis is thought to have occurred in Paris in 1578.
Infection can cause an acute respiratory illness characterized by severe and spasmodic coughing spells. The classic symptom of pertussis is a "whoop" sound caused by someone trying to breath during a bad cough. Severe complications of pertussis include slowed or stopped breathing, pneumonia and seizures. The disease is most severe in young babies, although severe cases and deaths can also occur in older children and adults.
Some doctors call pertussis "the 100-day cough" because symptoms can linger for weeks or even months.
Related: Whooping cough outbreaks: Why is pertussis on the rise in several countries?
The World Health Organization estimates that 24.1 million pertussis cases and 160,700 deaths occur worldwide in children under 5 each year. Pertussis is highly contagious. Upon exposure, 80% of people who have not been previously exposed to the bacterium or vaccinated against the disease will develop an infection.
Fortunately, the disease is largely preventable with a safe and effective vaccine, which was first licensed in the U.S. in 1914.
During the COVID-19 pandemic between 2020 and 2022, pertussis cases were lower than usual. This may have been a result of limited social contact due to social distancing, masking, school closures and lockdown measures, which reduced the spread of disease overall.
In the past two years, however, pertussis cases have surpassed figures from before the pandemic. In 2024, local and state public health agencies reported 35,435 pertussis cases to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — a rate five times higher than the 7,063 cases reported in 2023 and nearly double the 18,617 cases reported in 2019 prior to the pandemic.
Between October 2024 and April 2025, at least four people in the U.S. have died of pertussis: two infants, one school-age child and one adult.
Although vaccines have resulted in a dramatic decline in pertussis infections in the U.S., incidence of the disease has been rising since the 1990s, except for a brief dip during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Before the start of routine childhood vaccination for pertussis in 1947, its rates hovered between 100,000 and 200,000 cases per year. With vaccines, rates plunged under 50,000 annually by the late 1950s and under 10,000 per year in the late 1960s. They reached a low of 1,010 cases in 1976.
Starting in the 1980s and 1990s, however, the U.S. and several other countries have been seeing a steady resurgence of pertussis cases, which have exceeded 10,000 cases in the U.S. every year from 2003 to 2019. They dropped again during the pandemic until last year's resurgence.
There is no single explanation for why cases have been rising recently, but several factors probably contribute. First, pertussis naturally occurs in cyclic epidemics, peaking every two to five years. It is possible that the U.S. is headed into one of these peaks after a period of low activity between 2020 and 2022. However, some scientists have noted that the increase in cases is larger than what would be expected during a usual peak.
Some scientists have noted that this apparent resurgence correlates with a change in the type of vaccine used in children. Until the 1990s, the pertussis vaccine contained whole, killed B. pertussis bacteria cells. Whole-cell vaccine can stimulate a long-lasting immune response, but it is also more likely to cause fever and other vaccine reactions in children.
In the 1990s, national vaccine programs began to transition to a vaccine that contains purified components of the bacterial cell but not the whole cell. Some scientists now believe that although this partial-cell vaccine is less likely to cause high fevers in children, it provides protection for a shorter time. Immunity after whole-cell vaccination is thought to last 10-12 years compared with three to five years after the partial-cell vaccine. This means people may become susceptible to infection more quickly after vaccination.
Vaccination rates are also not as high as they should be and have started falling in children since 2020. In the U.S., the percent of kindergartners who are up to date with recommended pertussis vaccines has declined from 95% during the 2019-20 school year to 92% in the 2023-24 school year. Even fewer adolescents receive a booster dose.
Routine vaccination for children starting in infancy followed by booster doses in adolescents and adults can help keep immunity high.
Public health experts recommend that children receive five doses of the pertussis vaccine. According to the recommendations, they should receive the first three doses at 2, 4 and 6 months of age, then two additional doses at 15 months and 4 years of age, with the aim of providing protection through early adolescence.
Infants younger than 6 weeks are not old enough to get a pertussis vaccine but are at the greatest risk of severe illness from pertussis. Vaccination during pregnancy can offer protection from birth due to antibodies that pass from the mother to the developing fetus. Many countries, including the U.S., now recommend that women receive one dose of pertussis vaccine between the 27th and 36th week of every pregnancy to protect their babies.
To maintain protection against pertussis after childhood, a booster dose of pertussis vaccine is recommended for adolescents at 11 to 12 years of age. The CDC recommends that all adults receive at least one booster dose.
Because immunity declines over time, people who are in contact with infants and other high-risk groups, such as caregivers, parents and grandparents, may benefit from additional booster doses. When feasible, the CDC also recommends a booster dose for adults 65 years and older.
Vaccine safety studies over the past 80 years have proven the pertussis vaccine to be safe. Around 20% to 40% of vaccinated infants experience local reactions, such as pain, redness and swelling at the vaccination site, and 3% to 5% of vaccinated infants experience a low-grade fever. More severe reactions are much less common and occur in fewer than 1% of vaccinated infants.
RELATED STORIES
—Measles has long-term health consequences for kids. Vaccines can prevent all of them.
—Shingles vaccine may directly guard against dementia, study hints
—'We're already on the precipice of disaster': Deadly measles outbreaks could explode across the US in the next 25 years if vaccinations fall, model predicts
The vaccine is also highly effective: For the first year after receiving all five doses of the pertussis vaccine, 98% of children are protected from pertussis. Five years after the fifth dose, 65% of vaccinated children remain protected.
Booster vaccination during adolescence protects 74% of teens against pertussis, and booster vaccination during pregnancy protects 91% to 94% of immunized babies against hospitalization due to pertussis.
Families can talk to their regular health care providers about whether a pertussis vaccine is needed for their child, themselves or other family members.
This edited article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Emerging Options in Second-Line Therapy for Metastatic NSCLC
Emerging Options in Second-Line Therapy for Metastatic NSCLC

Medscape

timean hour ago

  • Medscape

Emerging Options in Second-Line Therapy for Metastatic NSCLC

Standard treatment of metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is immunotherapy in the first line, followed by combination therapy with docetaxel and ramucirumab in the second line. But a new antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) and other drugs currently in development are broadening the options for these patients. Dr Tom Stinchcombe of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, discusses ADCs, checkpoint inhibitors combined with tumor treating fields (TTF) therapy, and other targeted therapies being evaluated as second-ling therapies for metastatic NSCLC. Dr Stinchcombe first describes telisotuzumab vedotin, a c-Met-directed antibody and microtubule inhibitor conjugate indicated for metastatic NSCLC patients with high c-Met protein overexpression. The drug received FDA-accelerated approval on the basis of the LUMINOSITY trial, in which telisotuzumab vedotin monotherapy provided clinically meaningful response and progression-free survival in this population. He then describes TTF therapy, which delivers electrical impulses to the tumor site to disrupt processes critical for cancer cell division. The LUNAR trial showed the benefit of TTF plus checkpoint inhibition in second-line treatment of metastatic NSCLC, suggesting an additive benefit of this combination. Finally, he discussed two trials showing second-line therapies for patients with KRAS G12C mutations, in which sotorasib and adagrasib have shown potential benefit over docetaxel in this population.

WeightWatchers Returns With a Plan for the New GLP-1 World
WeightWatchers Returns With a Plan for the New GLP-1 World

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

WeightWatchers Returns With a Plan for the New GLP-1 World

WeightWatchers is no longer content to stew about its seemingly slender prospects in the Wegovy era. After the GLP-1 onslaught plunged the company into Chapter 11 submission in May, the dieting brand emerged from bankruptcy last week to announce it had successfully trimmed the fat from its considerable debt load, built a strategy for success moving forward, and plans to relist on the Nasdaq. READ ALSO: Bitcoin Tops $120,000 With Congress Poised to Consider Key Crypto Bills and Inflation Data and Bank Earnings Kick Off a Crucial Test for Markets It's worth remembering that the company, which rebranded as WW International in 2019, was already in trouble before a little weekly injectable came along that promised the same results as being a WeightWatchers client without the arduous processes of carefully scheduled workout classes and calorie-counted meals. The pandemic had already crushed its in-person business, and business never recovered. In 2018, the company reported annual revenue of $1.5 billion; by 2021, that had fallen to $1.2 billion, and by 2024, a measly $800 million. By May, company lawyers proclaimed in a bankruptcy hearing that an 'evolution in consumer preferences and the rapid rise of GLP-1s' made it unable to service its $1.6 billion debt load. Now? WeightWatchers wants to turn GLP-1s from poison pill to bottom line miracle drug, among other plans to rev up new revenue: The company has struck a deal with Novo Nordisk to sell weight loss drug Wegovy directly to clients on its online platform at $299 per month. WeightWatchers set the stage for such a movie in 2023 when it acquired telehealth company Sequence for $132 million. The company also plans to push into menopause treatment plans, which it says is designed to address a broader gap in healthcare. 'It is a very natural overlap. In the perimenopausal and menopausal phase, up to 70% of women experience weight gain,' newly hired Chief Medical Officer Dr. Kim Boyd told Reuters last week. The Ringer: The company will also have help from someone who knows the GLP-1 industry with great intimacy. As it emerges from bankruptcy, WeightWatchers has appointed a new board of directors — among them former Eli Lilly president Mike Mason, who helped pioneer the GLP-1 industry. 'As medical treatments like GLP-1s become more widely used, the need for trusted, comprehensive care models that combine medication with lasting lifestyle change has never been greater,' Mason said in a statement. This post first appeared on The Daily Upside. To receive delivering razor sharp analysis and perspective on all things finance, economics, and markets, subscribe to our free The Daily Upside newsletter. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

15 Brutal Truths We're Dying To Tell The Willfully Ignorant
15 Brutal Truths We're Dying To Tell The Willfully Ignorant

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

15 Brutal Truths We're Dying To Tell The Willfully Ignorant

Willful ignorance isn't just about lacking information—it's about choosing not to know. People often ignore facts to avoid discomfort, responsibility, or having to change their behavior. This mindset is frustrating because it blocks progress and spreads misinformation. It also harms relationships, communities, and future opportunities. Here are 15 things many of us wish we could say to people who refuse to face reality. Avoiding facts won't make the consequences magically disappear. Research from the American Psychological Association shows that people often choose ignorance to justify selfish behavior and avoid accountability. This leads to more harm, not less, both for individuals and society as a whole. Ignorance doesn't protect you from outcomes—it just delays dealing with them. Turning away from reality doesn't make it vanish. When people ignore what's inconvenient, they erode trust and ethical standards. Refusing to acknowledge the impact doesn't erase it. Ignorance may seem easier, but it often exacerbates situations. Choosing not to know is still a choice. And every choice comes with responsibility attached. Pretending something isn't real doesn't make it untrue. Reality doesn't shift just because someone refuses to accept it. Facts remain facts, even if they're inconvenient or uncomfortable. Dismissing science or history won't undo what's been proven. Reality doesn't bend to denial—it stays the same. Ignoring the truth can cause significant harm, especially when it affects crucial decisions. Whether it's health, relationships, or politics, facts matter. Denial keeps people stuck in false narratives. Facing reality is uncomfortable, but it's the only path to progress. Truth doesn't require your approval to exist. Avoiding problems only postpones the inevitable. Psychology Today notes that unaddressed issues often escalate and become more difficult to address over time. Facing challenges directly is how you resolve them and grow. Ignoring them creates bigger messes that could've been avoided. Silence and avoidance aren't solutions—they're delays. Problems thrive in the dark where they're ignored. The longer they're left unchecked, the worse they usually become. Maturity means addressing what's wrong, even when it's uncomfortable. Growth comes from confronting difficulties, not pretending they don't exist. Avoidance doesn't protect you—it traps you. Tuning out other perspectives doesn't magically make your viewpoint correct. Real understanding comes from hearing ideas you might not agree with. Shutting down conversation keeps you stuck in an echo chamber. Growth requires listening, even when it's uncomfortable. Ignoring others doesn't make your position stronger—it makes it weaker. Listening broadens awareness and sharpens thinking. When you refuse to listen, you cut off chances to learn and evolve. Dismissing dissent doesn't protect your ideas—it isolates them. Engaging respectfully with different viewpoints strengthens understanding. Growth depends on curiosity, not stubbornness. Choosing to stay ignorant just because it's more comfortable is a luxury not everyone has. The Greater Good Science Center emphasizes how empathy and understanding require stepping outside our comfort zones. Turning a blind eye to injustice protects privilege, not progress. Staying silent or uninformed can help perpetuate harm. Awareness and compassion often come with discomfort—that's part of the growth process. Comfort shouldn't override doing what's right. Acknowledging others' realities fosters a more compassionate and inclusive world. Willful ignorance perpetuates systems of harm. Growth asks us to confront discomfort, not avoid it. Real change starts with awareness and empathy. Refusing to acknowledge injustice or wrongdoing allows it to thrive. Silence isn't neutral—it's often complicity. Staying quiet allows harm to continue unchecked. Speaking up takes courage, but it also creates change. Ignoring problems doesn't absolve you; it aligns you with them. Awareness is the first step toward fixing what's wrong. When people remain silent, they help perpetuate broken systems. Speaking out disrupts harm and makes space for solutions. Injustice depends on people looking away. Courage means refusing to do that. Reality doesn't change because someone chooses not to look. The National Institutes of Health reports that ignoring facts leads to poor decisions and worse outcomes. Facts remain true, even when they're uncomfortable. Ignorance may seem easier, but it ultimately leads to harm. The truth doesn't need validation to exist—it stands on its own. Acknowledging reality helps people make informed, responsible choices. Ignoring facts delays solutions and creates bigger problems. Rational decisions depend on facing evidence, not avoiding it. Reality will catch up eventually—better to meet it head-on. Knowledge protects; ignorance exposes. Holding a belief doesn't shield it from scrutiny. Strong ideas should survive questioning and evidence. Hiding beliefs from critique keeps people stagnant and closed off. Growth requires curiosity and openness to change. Protecting beliefs from challenge only exposes insecurity, not strength. Engaging with different perspectives strengthens understanding. Avoiding these conversations signals a lack of conviction, not fear. Confidence comes from knowing your beliefs can withstand examination. Growth is about learning, not staying comfortable. Openness leads to stronger, more informed beliefs. Choosing not to know won't stop the consequences from happening. Life moves forward, with or without your awareness. Ignoring reality makes you less prepared to face it. Problems don't disappear because you looked away—they grow in the dark. Being informed helps you make smarter, safer decisions. Avoiding information increases your vulnerability. Knowledge empowers you to adapt and protect yourself. Ignorance removes those tools and leaves you exposed. Facing facts might be uncomfortable, but it's always wiser. Truth doesn't wait for your permission to unfold. You can't grow if you're stuck in denial of reality. Progress depends on facing challenges honestly and taking action. Denial can freeze people in place and block new opportunities. Moving forward requires acknowledgment, even when it's uncomfortable. Avoidance keeps people circling the same problems. Facing reality unlocks potential solutions. You can't change what you refuse to see. Stagnation thrives in denial, not in truth. Growth is a process of acceptance, not avoidance. Facing facts is the only way to improve. Not knowing something doesn't make you stronger or safer. Ignorance often makes people easier to manipulate and more prone to mistakes. Information gives power and resilience. Choosing not to learn weakens your ability to adapt and succeed. Strength comes from knowledge, not avoidance. Avoiding facts leads to repeated failures. Learning helps you grow, evolve, and protect yourself. Staying ignorant limits your potential and your opportunities. Embracing knowledge shows courage and curiosity. Growth starts with asking questions, not hiding from answers. Ignoring problems doesn't just affect you—it affects everyone you're connected to. Your silence or inaction can allow harm to continue unchecked. Communities suffer when people refuse to engage. Change requires awareness and participation from everyone. Indifference isn't harmless—it's part of the problem. Caring creates change. Ignorance often upholds systems that hurt others. Choosing to understand builds stronger, more compassionate societies. Awareness is contagious; so is apathy. Your choice matters more than you realize. Growth often starts with discomfort. Facing hard truths stretches your understanding and strengthens resilience. Avoiding tough conversations might feel easier, but it limits your potential. Willful ignorance traps people in patterns that no longer serve them. Growth asks you to lean into discomfort, not run from it. Avoidance delays the necessary change. The longer you ignore discomfort, the harder growth becomes. Facing reality builds courage and adaptability. Discomfort isn't the enemy—stagnation is. Growth comes through challenges, not escape. You can't grow without learning. Staying willfully ignorant locks you into outdated beliefs and missed opportunities. Progress demands flexibility, curiosity, and the willingness to change. Avoiding new information holds you back. Ignorance isn't a shield—it's an anchor. Change starts with openness to learning. Growth requires letting go of what no longer works. Staying stuck is a choice, not a fate. Every new fact presents an opportunity to move forward. Ignorance keeps the door closed. It's no one else's responsibility to educate you if you refuse to learn. Personal growth requires effort, curiosity, and accountability. Expecting others to carry the weight of your ignorance is unfair and exhausting. Learning is a choice you make for yourself. Respect others by taking responsibility for your knowledge. Self-directed learning builds independence and confidence. Relying on others for answers you won't seek yourself isn't fair. Knowledge is out there—you have to reach for it. Growth starts with your effort, not someone else's labor. Accountability begins with choosing to understand.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store