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NEWS RELEASES
Protecting Newborn Infants is Project’s
Aim
Houston, TX (Jan. 24, 2008) – The new
Center for Vaccine Awareness
and Research at Texas Children’s Hospital announced that it will
implement the nation’s first major
“cocoon strategy” vaccination
program to protect newborn infants from the life-threatening
infection pertussis, more commonly known as whooping cough.
Whooping cough is a highly-contagious bacterial infection of the
respiratory system. While the disease can occur at any age, whooping
cough can be particularly serious and even life-threatening to very
young infants.
Recent statistics show that whooping cough is on the rise again.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
over 50,000 cases of whooping cough were reported in the United
States in 2004 and 2005, the largest number since the 1950s. This
increase is due to an epidemic of pertussis in adolescents and
adults who have lost their immunity from their childhood vaccines
and need a booster vaccine. While this population has less severe
consequences from the infection, they are the source of its spread
to infants who are too young to be protected by their own
vaccinations.
The cocoon strategy is the process of vaccinating the baby’s mother
and other adolescent and adult family members who will be in close
contact with the infant, so that the baby is surrounded by family
members who can not spread pertussis. Babies under six months old
are too young to have received all three doses of the whooping cough
vaccine, and studies show that more than 75 percent of infected
babies get pertussis from family members.
“The idea behind the cocoon strategy is that the vaccinated family
members can block transmission of the infection to the unvaccinated
or incompletely vaccinated infant,” said
C. Mary Healy, M.D.,
program leader and director of Vaccinology and Maternal Immunization
at the Center for Vaccine Awareness and Research.
Through this program, Texas Children’s Center for Vaccine Awareness
and Research will administer whooping cough booster vaccines, called
Tdap, to approximately 5,800 families at Houston’s Ben Taub General
Hospital (BTGH), administering over 17,000 shots in the first year.
According to Dr. Healy, the cocoon strategy involves first educating
the mother and her family about pertussis and the Tdap vaccine
before administering the booster vaccine. The program team, working
in collaboration with BTGH staff, is prepared to communicate with
families in both English and Spanish. The first year of this program
is made possible by a grant from the Baylor Methodist Community
Health Fund.
“This program enables us to provide whooping cough education and
booster vaccines to adolescent and adult family members who need it,
helping protect the most vulnerable – newborn and young infants,”
said Dr. Healy. “At the same time, we will explore efficient
processes to optimize this intervention and potentially reduce
serious pertussis disease in our community.”
Using the cocoon strategy vaccination model to prevent whooping
cough has been recommended by the CDC since 2006, but has not been
implemented by health care organizations.
“We commend Texas Children’s Center for Vaccine Awareness and
Research for undertaking this important project,” said Dr. Melinda
Wharton, deputy director of the National Center for Immunization and
Respiratory Diseases at the CDC. “Not only will it benefit the
families receiving the vaccine, but we are sure it will contribute
to our understanding of pertussis prevention.”
Dr. Healy said the rise in pertussis cases is largely attributed to
the fact that the vaccine most people received during childhood
eventually wears off. Adolescents and adults who do not receive a
booster vaccine are susceptible to this infection. In addition,
young infants do not have full immunity until they have received
three doses of the vaccine.
A
The Vaccine Awareness and Research Center at Texas Children’s
Hospital promotes healthier children and families by providing
parents and health care professionals with the latest information
and recommendations on vaccines for infants, children, adolescents,
pregnant women and adults through its Web site,
www.vaccine.texaschildrens.org and by conducting research that
contributes to effective vaccine delivery models. An ongoing
program, the center is the creation of four Texas Children’s
Hospital physicians who are experts in the fields of vaccine
education and research, pediatrics, infectious diseases and
adolescent medicine.
About Texas
Children’s Hospital
Texas Children's Hospital is committed to a community of healthy
children by providing the finest pediatric patient care, education
and research. Renowned worldwide for its expertise and breakthrough
developments in clinical care and research, Texas Children’s is
ranked in the top ten best children’s hospitals by U.S. News and
World Report. Texas Children’s also operates the nation’s largest
primary pediatric care network, with over 40 offices throughout the
greater Houston community. Texas Children’s has embarked on a $1.5
Billion expansion,
Vision 2010, which includes a Neurological
Research Institute, a comprehensive obstetrics facility focusing on
high risk births, and a community hospital in suburban West Houston.
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