Communicable disease factsheets
Pertussis
Pertussis (whooping cough) is a serious, sometimes fatal, respiratory infection caused by the bacterium, Bordetella pertussis. This fact sheet covers: the disease and its agent; spread of infection; prevention; surveillance and reporting.
The disease and its agent
Pertussis (whooping cough) is a serious, sometimes fatal, respiratory infection caused by the bacterium, Bordetella pertussis. World-wide pertussis is responsible for about 250,000 deaths in children annually.In most cases the disease usually begins with cold-like symptoms, which progresses to a paroxysmal cough with a inspiratory whoop. Babies under 12 months of age often require admission to hospital. Complications include convulsions, pneumonia, coma, inflammation of the brain, and permanent brain damage. Around one in every 200 children under six months of age who contracts pertussis will die. The most common cause of death is from pertussis pneumonia.
Spread of infection
Pertussis is a highly infectious disease, typically transferred to 70-100 per cent of susceptible household contacts. Infection is spread by direct contact with droplets from the nose and throat of an infected person. The incubation period is commonly 7-10 days and not more that 21 days. A case is infectious from 7 days after exposure to 3 weeks after the onset of typical paroxysms. Children should be excluded from child care until well and until five days after starting antibiotic treatment.During epidemics cases occur mainly in school aged children, who then pass it on to younger siblings. Adolescents and adults may also be reservoirs of infection. In the 1993-1996 Australian epidemic almost 50 per cent of reported cases were in adults and children over 9 years of age.
Prevention
The incidence and severity of pertussis is reduced by immunisation. The vaccine is usually given as a trivalent vaccine (DTP), in which pertussis is combined with diphtheria and tetanus vaccines. The primary course consists of 3 doses, the first at 2 months of age and then at intervals of 2 months. Booster doses are recommended at 18 months and at the time of school entry (4-5 years).Information about outbreak control, exclusion periods and chemoprophylaxis of contacts is provided in the CDNANZ publication Control of Pertussis in Australia, 1998. .
Surveillance and reporting
Reported cases are collected through the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System, for national reporting through the Communicable Diseases Intelligence (CDI).Year | ACT | NSW | NT | Qld | SA | Tas | Vic | WA | Total |
1991 | 7 | 45 | 0 | 131 | 44 | 2 | 65 | 43 | 337 |
1992 | 9 | 195 | 1 | 208 | 67 | 27 | 140 | 92 | 739 |
1993 | 45 | 1405 | 7 | 597 | 1126 | 58 | 513 | 239 | 3990 |
1994 | 19 | 1534 | 138 | 1937 | 982 | 26 | 447 | 568 | 5651 |
1995 | 34 | 1342 | 174 | 1416 | 389 | 118 | 376 | 448 | 4297 |
1996 | 33 | 1112 | 16 | 766 | 690 | 30 | 1201 | 183 | 4031 |
1997 | 115 | 3536 | 24 | 1786 | 1643 | 119 | 1683 | 1180 | 10086 |
1998 | 7 | 1117 | 5 | 622 | 248 | 17 | 209 | 247 | 2472 |
Publications
- Hepatitis C Prevention, Treatment and Care: Guidelines for Australian Custodial Settings
- National Guidelines for the Management of People with HIV Who Place Others at Risk
- Guidelines for the early clinical and public health management of meningococcal disease in Australia - Revised Edition 2007
- AHMPPI policy on antiviral prophylaxis and the implications for pathology and research staff
