Undervaccination associated with increased risk of whooping cough

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A little girl in pink looks at her arm as a gloved hand gives her an injection. For a toddler, she is very well composed.

Undervaccination with the diptheria, tetanus toxoids and acelluar pertussis (DTaP) vaccine appears to be associated with an increased risk of pertussis (whooping cough) in children 3 to 36 months of age, according to a study by Jason M. Glanz, Ph.D., of the Institute for Health Research at Kaiser Permanente Colorado, Denver.

“Undervaccination is an increasing trend that potentially places children and their communities at an increased risk for serious infectious disease,” according to the study.

The study involved children born between 2004 and 2008 and cared for at eight managed care organizations. Each child with laboratory-confirmed pertussis (72 patients) was matched to four randomly selected control patients for a total of 288 controls.

Undervaccincation was defined as missing any of four scheduled doses of the DTaP vaccine. Of 72 case patients with pertussis, 34 (47.22 percent) were undervaccinated for DTaP vaccine by the date of pertussis diagnosis compared to 64 (22.2 percent) of the control patients. Children undervaccinated for three or four doses of DTaP vaccine were 18.56 and 28.38 times more likely, respectively, to have received a diagnosis of pertussis than children who were age-appropriately vaccinated, the study reports.

“Undervaccination with DTaP vaccine increases the risk of pertussis among children 3 to 36 months of age,” the study concludes.

(Source: For the Media, The JAMA Network Journals)

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Date Created: September 18, 2013