velvetpage: (exterminate)
velvetpage ([personal profile] velvetpage) wrote2007-11-05 06:10 am
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Whooping Cough

A little girl who was here playing with Elizabeth on Saturday has been diagnosed with whooping cough. She's had all her vaccinations and she wasn't sick before she left home - she started feeling poorly after dinner. Which is to say, I don't blame the family at all.

In other words, at least two families who have done everything they're supposed to do in regards to preventing the spread of this disease, have come in contact with it - probably as a result of someone at this little girl's school who DIDN'T have their vaccinations up-to-date. The problem is rampant in Southern Ontario, especially Toronto - it's estimated that only about fifty percent of kids have their vaccines up-to-date, and fewer adults than that have had their booster shots. (I have - I got it when I got my tetanus shot about two months ago, and now I'm glad I did.)

Now, chances are that even if someone in my family contracts it, they'll have a fairly mild case. We're vaccinated, and recently, though Claire's eighteen-month vax is coming up in a couple of weeks. But the chances of contracting that mild case are about thirty percent, because increased immunity is not complete immunity. Being overtired, being a little under the weather with something else, being in need of some better vitamins, or just plain bad luck with a struggling immune system, can all make people more vulnerable. That's why, in order for a vaccination program to prevent outbreaks, the vast majority of the population needs to be up-to-date on their vaccinations.

Two of the people who were there on Saturday work closely with kids. Some of my students and colleagues have small babies at home. I'm going to mention to one of those that, if their baby hasn't had her shots yet, she should get them now, just in case I get sick and her father brings it home. It's a long shot, but pretty baby Lily should be protected against it even so.

I repeat, I'm not upset at the family in question. They were doing everything they should have done, and informed everyone of the diagnosis as soon as they had received it so we could take steps. No, I'm angry at the large number of Torontonians (and other Ontarians) who think that they're safe because whooping cough has been so rare for the last few decades. I'm angry at the people advising parents, erroneously, that vaccines are worse than the diseases they prevent. I'm angry at the family doctors and other health professionals who don't take enough measures to get their patients in for their well-baby visits, including shots. I'm angry at a provincial government that has known about this problem for several years and has yet to put a comprehensive, community-level vaccination program in effect. This is a public health issue, and our public health officials haven't done anything about it.

Any adults who read this who come in regular contact with my family are advised to ensure that their booster shots are up-to-date. You're supposed to have one every ten years to be fully protected; if it's been more than eight or you can't remember, get another. Whooping cough is usually not that serious for adults, or even older children; the risk is that the adults will transmit it to a newborn baby, who could die.

[identity profile] r-caton.livejournal.com 2007-11-05 05:13 pm (UTC)(link)
I had Whooping Cough at the age of 35 (51 now).... think I got it from my niece, she had a slight cough.... I was still working for 4 of the 6 weeks I had it. Why? Well it couldn't be WC could it I was 35 and you don't get it at 35 (doctors opinion not mine)..... I even drove my boss from Romfor to Liverpool for Heavens sake.....

I pray you don't get affected by it ...I thought it was evil and it's affected my coughing ever since.... a child who wasn't savvy ... doesn't bear thinking about.

[identity profile] perlandria.livejournal.com 2007-11-05 09:56 pm (UTC)(link)
I worked the whole time I had Whooping Cough too, and the doctors didn't catch it until I got a related case of bronchitis DESPITE A MINI EPIDEMIC OF WC AT THE TIME. *head desk* I had just started a new job about the time I got it and the Chinese folk name for whooping cough is the 100 day cough - very accurate. I don't think anyone at that job believed me when I said what I had. *more head desk* In retrospect I am very, very happy they kicked me out at my 90 day review but it was frustrating at the time.

It took a lot of self control to work with my body with the type of coughing whooping cough is, deciding when to suppress the cough so it won't spiral, when to let it go to be productive, when it is better to be in a hot shower, when it is better to be in bed. To know that THIS coughing fit is going to end in the bathroom. To know how little to eat, how often. It would have been so easy to choke (more). I shudder to think about how someone weak, ignorant or incapable of self-action, determination or expression would survive it.

I hope the little girl's immunizations means she has a very mild time of it.