Who gives pertussis to infants? Source of infection for laboratory confirmed cases less than 12 months of age during an epidemic, Sydney, 2009

Authors

  • Andrew Jardine Public Health Unit, Sydney South West Area Health Service, Camperdown, New South Wales; National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory
  • Stephen J Conaty Public Health Unit, Sydney South West Area Health Service, Camperdown, New South Wales
  • Chris Lowbridge Public Health Unit, Sydney South West Area Health Service, Camperdown, New South Wales
  • Jane Thomas Public Health Unit, Sydney West Area Health Service, Penrith, New South Wales
  • Michael Staff Public Health Unit, Northern Sydney Central Coast Area Health Service, Hornsby, New South Wales
  • Hassan Vally National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33321/cdi.2010.34.16

Keywords:

whooping cough, Bordetella pertussis, infants, source of infection, immunisation strategy

Abstract

Erratum: Authorship listed on the pdf version of this article was incomplete because of the inadvertent omission of Jane Thomas. The corrected authorship is as follows: Andrew Jardine, Stephen J Conaty, Chris Lowbridge, Jane Thomas, Michael Staff and Hassan Vally.

An important approach to protecting infants against pertussis is to provide a booster vaccination to close contacts, however this strategy requires a good understanding of infection sources to be effective. The objective of this study was to identify the most important sources of transmission of pertussis infection to infants, regardless of hospitalisation status. Standardised interviews were conducted during routine follow-up calls with the parent or guardian of laboratory confirmed pertussis cases less than 12 months of age notified to 3 Sydney metropolitan public health units during a pertussis outbreak from January to May 2009. All contacts with a coughing illness or laboratory confirmed pertussis during the 3 weeks prior to onset of illness in the index case, were recorded. A source of infection could not be identified for 29 infants (31%) and a total of 86 known or suspected sources were identified for the other 66 infants. The most frequently identified sources were siblings (36%) and parents (24%), followed by other family members (21%), friends (13%), and settings outside the home such as medical centres (6%). Of 20 siblings aged 3 or 4 years, 16 (80%) were sources of infection, compared with 14 of the 44 (32%) other siblings less than 18 years of age. During this epidemic siblings were more important sources of infant infection than parents. Siblings aged 3 and 4 years of age were particularly important transmitters of pertussis infection to infants. Minimising pertussis infection in 3 and 4 year olds may be an important measure to prevent infant infection. Commun Dis Intell 2010;34(2):–121.

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Published

03/06/10

How to Cite

Jardine, Andrew, Stephen J Conaty, Chris Lowbridge, Jane Thomas, Michael Staff, and Hassan Vally. 2010. “Who Gives Pertussis to Infants? Source of Infection for Laboratory Confirmed Cases Less Than 12 Months of Age During an Epidemic, Sydney, 2009”. Communicable Diseases Intelligence 34 (June):116-21. https://doi.org/10.33321/cdi.2010.34.16.

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