Public health alert (22 November 2024)
Due to ongoing high levels of pertussis cases (and hospitalisations) occurring consistently across the motu over the last several weeks, the National Public Health Service (NPHS) and the Public Health Agency is now declaring a national epidemic. We are asking healthcare professionals to please remain vigilant for people presenting with symptoms and to continue to promote vaccinations to protect vulnerable groups.
Vaccination
- Advise pregnant people particularly hāpu māmā of the increase in pertussis and recommend free Boostrix vaccination from 16 weeks in every pregnancy as it’s the best way to protect their newborn.
- Pertussis vaccination should be encouraged for the extended whānau of pregnant people, new babies and infants, although depending on their age they may not be eligible for a funded vaccine.
- Continue to prioritise on time immunisation for all babies at 6w, 3m and 5m and pertussis boosters at 4 years and 11 years for children.
- Encourage all staff, including reception and administrative staff, to be protected from pertussis as well as influenza and measles. Booster vaccinations are recommended 5-10 yearly depending on employer requirements for all lead maternity carers and healthcare workers who are in direct contact with infants.
- Adults aged 45 years (if they haven’t already had 4 vaccines) and 65 years are also eligible for a free pertussis booster.
Testing, treatment and isolation
- Pertussis PCR is the recommended test for people presenting with whooping cough characteristic symptoms, including onset of upper respiratory tract infection with cough; post-tussive vomiting, apnoea or cyanosis; an inspiratory whoop following cough in younger children noting infants may not whoop; gasping or gagging instead of whooping in older children and adults.
- PCR testing is useful within 3 weeks of symptom onset. Probable and confirmed cases need to isolate at home for 5 days from starting antibiotic treatment or 2 days if treated with azithromycin.
- Epidemiologically linked cases do not need to be tested but should be notified as cases.
To reduce transmission, treatment is recommended for cases within 3 weeks of onset of symptoms. Antibiotic prophylaxis is recommended for high priority contacts within 3 weeks of exposure to an infectious case.
High priority contacts include:
- infants aged younger than 1 year who have received <3 doses of a pertussis-containing vaccine, especially those aged <6 months and/or Māori and Pacific infants
- pregnant people in their last trimester of pregnancy
- people who work or spend extended time with vulnerable people outside the household, eg, early childhood centre, aged residential care, healthcare settings
- people at risk of severe disease, eg, chronic respiratory disease, congenital heart disease, immunocompromised children aged <5 years who are unimmunised or partially immunised.
Treatment of symptomatic or high priority contacts
Follow the guidance available on HealthPathways for antibiotic treatment of symptomatic and high priority contacts. Guidance is also available in the Communicable Diseases Manual. (external link)The recommended prophylactic antibiotics and dosages are the same for case treatment and prophylaxis for high-risk contacts.
Please notify suspected cases of pertussis to your local Public Health Service.
Resources
Pertussis (whooping cough) immunisation handbook(external link) Health New Zealand | Te Whatu Ora, NZ
Copan PCR swab image(external link)
Microbiology swabs and collection tubes(external link) Medinz, NZ, 2023
Te Whatu Ora clinical reminder: 9 March 2023
Te Whatu Ora is encouraging healthcare providers and professionals to be alert to the symptoms of pertussis/whooping cough and to encourage immunisation due to concerns about potential underlying community spread.
This comes following the recent tragic deaths of two people from whooping cough.
Pertussis is serious in very young children – during the last outbreak from October 2017 to May 2019, 50% of children with pertussis, who were aged under 1 year old, required hospitalisation.
Healthcare providers should consider pertussis as a possible alternative diagnosis, particularly in babies under 3 months with respiratory illness who may not present with the characteristic whoop. Be aware of the red flags of a seriously ill infant:
- apnoea
- dehydration
- lethargy
- cyanosis or O2 saturations <92%
- fever ≥ 38 degrees C.
And also consider early admission to hospital if any concerning clinical features:
- Poor feeding, with or without reduced urine output.
- History of prematurity.
- Infants aged < 3 months.
- Children with a history of chronic respiratory disease, cardiac disease, neuromuscular disease, or immune deficiency.
- Reduced alertness and responsiveness.
- Repeat presentations in this illness.
Any child less than 3 months of age with respiratory symptoms, whose caregiver has presented them for triage (via phone) should have a low threshold for offering an in-person assessment.
Free antenatal pertussis vaccination, with Boostrix, is available from general practice and also through many pharmacies across New Zealand. It can be given from the second trimester of every pregnancy and is recommended to have from 16 weeks, but at least 2 weeks before birth.
The whooping cough (pertussis) vaccination is free for:
- all children and young people aged under 18 years
- pregnant people for every pregnancy
- all adults at 45 and 65 years of age as immunity reduces (same vaccine as the tetanus booster)
- some groups at higher risk of becoming very unwell if they catch whooping cough (eg, chronic respiratory conditions, congenital heart disease or immunocompromised).
View the whooping cough pathway on your local HealthPathways site for information. Immunisation resources are available to download here(external link).
Practice notes
- Pertussis is a notifiable disease. Clinically suspected or laboratory confirmed cases must be notified to the Medical Officer of Health.
- Patients should be advised to avoid contact with others, especially infants and children, until at least 5 days of antibiotic treatment has been taken (2 days if azithromycin is used).
- Children with pertussis can deteriorate rapidly and may require hospitalisation.