logo
Whooping Cough Is Surging. Do You Need Another Shot?

Whooping Cough Is Surging. Do You Need Another Shot?

New York Times20 hours ago

After a brief lull during the pandemic, whooping cough has bounced back, raising alarm among public health officials.
There have been more than 10,000 whooping cough cases in the United States so far this year, an unusually high number even by prepandemic standards, said Dr. Kathryn Edwards, a vaccine expert at Vanderbilt University who has studied whooping cough, also called pertussis, for decades. A branch of the World Health Organization recently called on countries with high levels of spread, including the U.S., to bolster surveillance of the illness and increase vaccination efforts.
Dr. Edwards said the surge was most likely a combination of falling childhood vaccination rates and a lack of exposure to the disease during the pandemic. That exposure 'reminds' the immune system how to recognize and defend against the bacteria.
While less deadly than other vaccine-preventable illnesses like measles and polio, whooping cough — sometimes called the 100-day cough — is not a mild illness.
The respiratory illness is known for causing bouts of coughing so intense that they can lead to vomiting or even broken ribs. About a third of babies who get whooping cough need treatment at a hospital. Last year, 10 people died from the infection, and most of them were younger than a year old.
'These cough seizures can be so profound that you can lose consciousness and fall,' said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China Is Putting Aside Its Self-Sufficiency Push for American Medicine
China Is Putting Aside Its Self-Sufficiency Push for American Medicine

Wall Street Journal

time2 hours ago

  • Wall Street Journal

China Is Putting Aside Its Self-Sufficiency Push for American Medicine

SINGAPORE—China is racing toward economic self-sufficiency by weaning itself off American technology. But it has made a critical exception for another national priority: public health. To achieve its goal of elevating healthcare to the level of wealthy nations by the end of the decade, Beijing has continued to welcome American-made medical supplies. It has opened its market to advanced U.S. drugs over the past decade and, more recently, exempted medical goods from retaliatory tariffs.

An OpenAI exec says she was diagnosed with breast cancer and that ChatGPT has helped her navigate it
An OpenAI exec says she was diagnosed with breast cancer and that ChatGPT has helped her navigate it

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

An OpenAI exec says she was diagnosed with breast cancer and that ChatGPT has helped her navigate it

Kate Rouch, OpenAI's chief marketing officer, said she was diagnosed with breast cancer. Rouch said she is expected to make a full recovery and urged other women to prioritize their health. She said she leaned on OpenAI's ChatGPT to navigate her treatment. Kate Rouch, the chief marketing officer at OpenAI, shared on Friday that she was diagnosed with invasive breast cancer weeks after assuming the role, which she called her "dream job," in December. In a thread posted on X, Rouch said she was sharing her story to help other women, adding, "We can't control what happens to us--but we can choose how we face it. My biggest lesson: no one fights alone." Prior to joining OpenAI as the company's first CMO, Rouch was CMO at Coinbase and, before that, spent over a decade at Meta, including as vice president, global head of brand and product marketing. Rouch said she started treatment right around the Super Bowl in February, when OpenAI aired its first-ever ad, and that she has since gone through 13 rounds of chemotherapy while leading OpenAI's marketing team. She wrote that she is expected to make a full recovery. "It has been the hardest season of life — for me, for my husband, and for our two young children," Rouch said, adding she has been supported by OpenAI "at every step." "Silicon Valley can be brutal and transactional. And yet — I've never felt more held," she said, adding that "people showed up in incredible and unexpected ways." Rouch also said OpenAI's ChatGPT has helped her navigate her diagnosis and treatment, including by explaining cancer in a way that is age-appropriate for her kids, helping her manage the side effects of chemo, and creating custom meditations. "Experiencing our work as a patient has made OpenAI's mission feel more personal and important," she said. Rouch said she was sharing her story to encourage other women to "prioritize their health over the demands of families and jobs." "A routine exam saved my life. It could save yours, too," she said. Business Insider reached out to OpenAI for comment. Kevin Weil, the chief product officer at OpenAI, expressed support for Rouch in a reply to her thread. "We love you @kate_rouch!" he wrote. "Proud of you for telling your story and for being so full of fight." Read the original article on Business Insider

Hillsborough County installing AEDs at 25 parks and sports complexes
Hillsborough County installing AEDs at 25 parks and sports complexes

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Hillsborough County installing AEDs at 25 parks and sports complexes

The Brief Hillsborough County is installing AEDs at 23 parks and sports complexes. The AEDs were funded by the American Heart Association. The AEDs will be available for anyone to use in the event of a cardiac emergency. TAMPA, Fla. - Hillsborough County is equipping about two dozen of its parks with emergency gear in the event of a cardiac emergency. The county will install 25 AEDs, automated external defibrillators, at 23 parks and sports complexes across the county. Follow FOX 13 on YouTube What we know The American Heart Assocation funded the purchase of 25 AEDs for the Hillsborough County parks and sports complexes. The first AED has been installed at the Skyway Sports Complex. It will be one of two parks that will have two AEDs onsite, because of its size. "We're going to focus on putting these AEDs in sports complexes like this one that are very, very busy with thousands of users," Mikah Collins of Hillsborough County Parks and Recreation said. "But, we're also going to put them in our parks that are way out in the middle of nowhere, and that's going to be even more important, because it takes so long for an ambulance or first responders to get there." READ: Tampa Police get 300 new lifesaving choking devices from New York-based company The AEDs will be available for public use in the event of a cardiac emergency. The American Heart Association of Tampa Bay said if someone goes into cardiac arrest, when you call 911, dispatchers will give you a code to unlock the box containing the AED. "As soon as you open the machine, it's going to start talking, and it's going to tell you exactly what to do," Courtney Burt, the vice president of community impact with the American Heart Association of Tampa Bay, said. Burt said someone else should be performing CPR while the person is accessing the AED, and you're waiting for EMS to arrive. MORE: Tampa's SoHo braces for stormwater project amid business concerns By the numbers The American Heart Association said the first two minutes of someone going into cardiac arrest are the most important in terms of response. "CPR actually raises a person's chance of survival about two to three times," Burt said. "When we introduce an AED within that two-minute window, it can actually increase their survivability up to almost 70%." Burt said about 1,000 people a day in the U.S. have an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. She said a person's chance of surviving an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is less than 10%. "With an AED, it really probably triples your likelihood of surviving a major heart attack," Dr. Doug Ross, the chief medical officer of the AdventHealth West Florida division, said. Dig deeper Ross said an AED can be the difference between life and death. He said the machines are user-friendly and designed to be used by people who are not trained with them. READ: Week-long active threat training held with Hillsborough County deputies "Talks you through it. These are very automatic, you know," Ross said. "You turn it on, it talks you through how to put the pads on, what to do. It'll analyze the heart rhythm. And then, if you need to be shocked, then it tells you to push the button to shock." There's a growing movement to make AEDs more accessible. Governor Ron DeSantis signed House Bill 1607, which will require school districts to provide basic first aid training to certain students. It will also require every public school and charter school to have at least one AED on campus by July 1, 2027. "Not only will it help get funding and resources for schools to have the devices, but also the education related to CPR and policies that we call 'Cardiac Emergency Response Plans,'" Burt said. The new Florida law will go into effect on July 1. What's next Hillsborough County officials are installing the AEDs at the county parks and sports complexes and connecting them with 911 now. They hope the AEDs will be ready for use by August. WATCH FOX 13 NEWS: STAY CONNECTED WITH FOX 13 TAMPA: Download the FOX Local app for your smart TV Download FOX Local mobile app:Apple |Android Download the FOX 13 News app for breaking news alerts, latest headlines Download the SkyTower Radar app Sign up for FOX 13's daily newsletter

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store