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In the UK and parts of Europe we’re seeing a sharp hike in whooping cough, so dramatic it’s being called a ‘significant resurgence’. Nicknamed the 100-day cough, it’s a highly infectious respiratory infection and the ongoing surge is proving worry for health professionals thanks to the severe coughing fits it causes.
Here’s everything you need to know about whooping cough and what you as a business owner can do to help prevent it spreading, including a look at the unusual power of UV light sanitising systems.
How many whooping cough cases did we see in 2023?
In England and Wales we saw a ‘substantial increase’ in cases in 2023 compared to the year before, with around 230% more people than usual falling ill with whooping cough. On 5th January 2024 the media reported a 120% surge in just a month. Apparently the celebrity Jeremy Clarkson has caught it and is struggling to manage the cough. The current hot-spots are London, the North West of England and the South East.
About whooping cough in the UK
Whooping cough, officially named Pertussis, can last for several weeks and occasionally bedevils the sufferer for as long as a year. A highly contagious bacterial disease, it can start off looking and feeling a lot like a common cold. But the coughing fits it brings can go on and on for a very long time, hence the 100 year cough nickname.
The ‘whooping’ part comes from the unusual sound made when people try to draw breath in between coughs, and the sound can be a way to diagnose the illness in children. On the other hand the whooping sound isn’t as common in adults and very young infants, so the sound alone isn’t a reliable enough sign to make a firm diagnosis.
Spread through the air in droplets, the bacterium is particularly dangerous for infants and young children. The complications can include pneumonia, hemoptysis (coughing up blood), otitis media (middle ear infections) and even seizures, sore ribs, a hernia, and urinary incontinence.
What’s whooping cough like?
The NHS says the first signs of whooping cough are similar to a cold, with symptoms like a runny nose and sore throat. After about a week, you can expect fits of coughing that last for a few minutes at a time and get worse at night. The ‘whoop’ happens when you need to gasp for breath in between coughs.
Some people have difficulty breathing after a coughing bout and toddlers can even turn blue or grey through a lack of oxygen. The thick mucus the coughing brings up can make people vomit and all the constant coughing can turn the face bright red. The uncontrollable cough can last for many months but there’s usually no need for hospital treatment unless you’re suffering very badly or are less than 6 months old.
As long as it’s diagnosed within three weeks, you’re usually prescribed antibiotics for whooping cough. They help the body fight the illness as well as suppressing how infectious it is. If you’ve been ill for more than three weeks you’re usually not infectious any more.
When you should see a doctor about whooping cough
Pregnant women should see a doctor if they come into contact with an infected person, and the same goes if a child less than 6 months old catches it.
If the cough is very bad and getting worse, the recommendation is to see a GP. And if someone has a compromised or weakened immune system, it’s wise to seek medical help.
Call 999 if someone’s lips, tongue, face or skin suddenly turn blue or grey, or has breathing difficulties. If the chest pain gets worse when breathing or coughing, it could be pneumonia so call 999. If a child is having fits or seizures, call 999. And be aware that the disease can look a lot like TB, another severe bacterial illness that’s fast increasing in the UK. It comes with some very nasty antibiotic resistant strains that can - and do - kill.
How long to isolate yourself and when to do it?
If you’ve caught whooping cough, the experts recommend you self-isolate for at least 5 days while the antibiotics kick in, so you keep other people safe.
How to stop whooping cough spreading to employees and customers
Our UV light sanitising systems quickly, efficiently damage the DNA and RNA inside bacteria so badly they’re rendered harmless in minutes. While the whooping cough bacterium isn’t on
the extensive list of tested bacteria proven to be killed by UV light there’s no reason to suspect it won’t be. It’s a bacterium like any other, and the same science applies.
Whooping cough is just one illness on a growing list of infectious threats to humanity. UVC light is a low-cost to buy and run, a fiendishly good way to kill a huge list of threats including viruses, moulds and spores. It’s a match made in heaven. If you’d like to pioneer safe workplaces, safe spaces for consumers and a healthier business, let’s discuss the potential of UVC.