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Whooping cough cases in Japan hit new high for 4th straight week

Whooping cough cases in Japan hit new high for 4th straight week

NHK6 days ago
Weekly cases of whooping cough in Japan have hit a new high for the fourth straight week.
The Japan Institute for Health Security says medical institutions across the country reported 3,682 patients in the week through July 13. That was 104 more than in the previous week and the highest since the current method of recordkeeping began in 2018.
By prefecture, Tokyo had the most, with 273 patients. It was followed by 236 in Saitama, 198 in Gunma, 175 in Kanagawa, 169 in Niigata, 167 in Ibaraki, 153 in Chiba and 152 in Hyogo.
The cumulative number of patients so far this year stands at 48,073.
Whooping cough is a bacterial infection that affects mainly children and is characterized by severe persistent coughing. Infants can become seriously ill or die if infected. As of the end of June, at least four infants up to the age of four months have died in Tokyo and three other prefectures.
Medical institutions in many regions have been reporting infections that are resistant to drugs.
The Japan Pediatric Society is calling on parents to vaccinate their babies as soon as they are two months old.
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