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April 1, 2002
U.S. IMMUNIZATION NEWS
"Whooping-Cough Risk to Patients at Swedish
Medical Center" Seattle Times (seattletimes.nwsource.com) (03/30/02) P. B1;
King, Warren
As many as 140 women and newborn babies at
Swedish Medical Center/First Hill in Seattle may have been exposed to whooping
cough, as an employee was recently diagnosed with the illness. Hospital
officials are warning patients, physicians, and staff members who had contact
with the hospital's Women and Infants
Center employee between March 15 and 18 or on March 22 to receive an antibiotic
to ward off the disease, says Will Shelton, the hospital's manager of
epidemiology. Shelton did not give the employee's name to protect her privacy
but did provide a number that concerned people can call to determine if they had
contact with the employee. Whooping cough, or pertussis, is potentially fatal
to infants who have not been completely vaccinated against the illness; however,
adults who contract the disease often do not notice the symptoms, which means
they can spread the illness to others without knowing it. A whooping cough
immunization is required before children enter school or day care in Washington
State, and health officials recommend vaccination against the contagious disease
before two years of age.
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