Whooping cough information
Derbyshire County Council have advised that numbers of cases of whooping cough are on the increase nationally and have asked us to share the following information:
- We have seen increases in cases of Whooping Cough across the country, including 5 UK baby deaths. We have also seen positive laboratory confirmed cases in a small number of Derbyshire residents.
- We want to promote the vaccine message, especially to pregnant women. The vaccine is safe to be given in pregnancy. Whilst some women may feel that they would wish to wait until their baby is born, by having the vaccine in pregnancy (between 16 and 32 weeks), the baby will be born with protection against the disease.
- Vaccines for infants and children do include Whooping Cough, but cannot be given until a baby is 8 weeks old, leaving them vulnerable.
Knowing the signs and symptoms of whooping cough
Whooping cough - NHS (www.nhs.uk)
What is whooping cough and is there a vaccine? – UK Health Security Agency (blog.gov.uk)
Why vaccination is important and the safest way to protect yourself - NHS (www.nhs.uk)
Vaccination of pregnant women for every pregnancy
Whooping cough and pregnancy poster – help protect your baby (publishing.service.gov.uk)
For sharing on social media:
Facebook: Whopping Cough - know the symptoms
Facebook: Whooping Cough - vaccine in pregnancy
useful video with the sound - Twitter X: Whooping Cough - know the symptoms
If anyone has whooping cough they should stay at home and not go to work school or nursery until 48 hours after starting antibiotics or 3 weeks after symptoms start if not having antibiotics.
Information for individuals diagnosed with whooping cough - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)