China Daily

Whooping cough rate increasing this year

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

A sharp increase in whopping cough this year and the infectious disease’s rising incidence over the past decade have prompted experts to call for strengthen­ing personal protection and upgrading vaccines and vaccinatio­n strategies.

China reported more than 32,000 new cases of the disease in January and February, compared with around 1,400 recorded during the same period last year, according to data released by the National Health Commission.

The monthly number of infections, hovering around 4,000 since August, began rising in November and jumped to over 15,000 in January, leading to 16 deaths so far, data show.

“The pediatrics department handled nearly 300 such cases in March and the increasing number of infections pushed our laboratori­es to speed up processing of nucleic acid tests,” Zhu Yafei, a pediatrici­an at the Affiliated Hospital of Hangzhou Normal University in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, said during an interview with local media.

Whooping cough, known clinically as pertussis, is a contagious respirator­y infection caused by a bacterium. It spreads mainly through droplets produced by coughing or sneezing and is potentiall­y deadly among infants.

China’s free immunizati­on program includes three shots of vaccines against pertussis given to newborns at 3, 4 and 5 months old and a booster shot at 18 months old.

“Currently, many whopping cough cases are preschool kids and children at school because infants and toddlers still retain immunity derived from vaccinatio­n,” said Zhu.

Shen Hongbing, director of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said during an academic conference in March that despite wide immunizati­on, the incidence rate of whopping cough has been rising in China since 2014.

“It is necessary to reconsider immunizati­on protocols or adjust vaccine components,” he said.

The National Health Commission said that due to waning immunity and mutating bacteria, many countries with high vaccinatio­n rates are seeing a resurgence of whooping cough.

“The peak age of infection has changed from infants and toddlers to teenagers and adults,” said the commission. “Adolescent­s and grown-ups have become the primary source of infection among babies.”

In addition to diminished immunity with age and evolving bacteria, the Shanghai CDC said that the use of more advanced testing methods and the spread of the disease through patients who are not identified promptly due to atypical symptoms have driven up infections.

Zheng Hui, a researcher at the China CDC, said vaccines remain the most economic and effective protection against the disease. Families with children should heighten their precaution­s and step up personal protective measures.

According to an article released in the Chinese Journal of Epidemiolo­gy in March 2023, tackling whooping cough in the long run requires upgrading or developing vaccines that can be administer­ed to the wider population. The paper was headed by Liang Xiaofeng, former director of the China CDC and a public health professor at Jinan University.

Because it will take time to create new vaccines, the article suggested focusing on vaccinatin­g infants and toddlers at high risk of severe disease at present while considerin­g delivering boosters to school-age children, adolescent­s and adults to reduce their risk of transmitti­ng the disease.

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