Whooping cough information
Diagnosis, symptoms, treatment, prevention, 
sounds recordings, videos

This is the most comprehensive website on the planet about whooping cough. It is designed for everyone, including health care professionals, but especially for people who think they might have it.
I suggest you bookmark this page. There are so many options when you do a search for whooping cough that you will probably be unable to find this comprehensive site again otherwise.

Use the menu at the top of this page to explore topics or follow the page down for a general overview of the whooping cough problem

Do you have a terrible new cough that nobody can diagnose? It might be whooping cough……..find out here

Also known as pertussis or whoopingcough-pertussis or The 100-day cough

Causes sudden attacks of coughing with gagging and vomiting with little or no warning

The infection can range from no symptoms to full whooping cough

If you are a parent with a child you suspect has whooping cough you may identify with this 3 minute video by the Oxford VaccineGroup

If you think you have whooping cough, you may like to look at the latest UK rising numbers News items

Myths about whooping cough

This site provides comprehensive whooping cough information. It was established in July 2000 and has been active since then. I prefer to call the condition whoopingcough-pertussis. 

I am Dr Doug Jenkinson. I have studied whooping cough as a family doctor for over 40 years in Nottinghamshire, England. I have published a book (Springer Biography series) about my whooping cough studies. You can read my credentials here and watch a YouTube video about the Keyworth study on the Keyworth Study page.

You will find the answer to any question about whooping cough (pertussis, parapertussis) here.

Whooping cough is much commoner than people realise because it gets missed and is under-notified.

It is very difficult for health care professionals to diagnose whooping cough because it is a terrible but infrequent cough that cannot be put on to demonstrate it.

This site helps your health care professional to diagnose you correctly when you feel you are disbelieved by suggesting you record an attack and use the printable handout.

Summary of symptoms in children over 1 year, teens and adults

Whooping cough sometimes starts with  a bit of a cold and mild feverishness. More often it is just a sore throat and a bit of a tickly cough.

After about 7 to 10 days the cough starts coming in spasms of continuous coughing that may last several minutes.

These paroxysms of coughing usually occur every few hours and there may be little or no coughing between the attacks.

The attacks of coughing may be followed by vomiting or drooling or both. Sometimes after the lungs have been emptied of air from a paroxysm, a deep indrawing of breath causes  a whooping noise from the throat as air is sucked back in.

The number of paroxysms can vary from 5 to 50 in 24 hours. 12 is quite usual.

This can go on for 2 to 6 weeks or more before becoming less severe and slowly fizzling out over several weeks.

Read the Blog “So you think you have have whooping cough”

Summary of symptoms in babies

Babies can get very seriously ill from whooping cough especially if they are not immunised. One in a hundred are likely to die from it despite the best medical care. It is not rare. In recent years about one in a thousand was catching it unless the mother had a pregnancy booster shot.

Babies are too weak to keep coughing so violently and they are prone to not restart breathing after a paroxysm, or sometimes just stop breathing instead of coughing. All babies with whooping cough need hospital treatment.

Go to page with detailed symptoms of whooping cough

Summary of treatment

Once the cough had been going on for about 7 days or more there is NO treatment. It will take its course. Antibiotics can stop it being spread, which is very important. If complications occur these must be treated according whatever they are.

Provided whooping cough is caught in the very early stages before symptoms are fully developed, in the first 7 days for instance, an antibiotic such as azithromycin can reduce its severity. If given in the incubation period it may prevent it altogether.

The same antibiotic is used in the first 3 weeks from onset in order to prevent spreading it to others, but after this time it is unnecessary and not beneficial.

Babies need to be in hospital for treatment of whooping cough and support and they may need high dependency care.

Cough medicines and inhalers do not help.

Go to page of treatment in detail of whooping cough

Summary of prevention

During the incubation period of whooping cough, which is 7 to 10 days, a macrolide antibiotic such as azithromycin (or erythromycin, or clindamycin) can prevent it developing.

Immunization is the chief prevention method for whooping cough. The precise programme varies from country to country but always consists of a primary course of three injections at monthly intervals starting at about 2 months of age. Boosters are usually given after intervals of years.

A booster injection in mid pregnancy prevents most cases that would otherwise occur in the the first few months of life, which is the most dangerous age to get whooping cough.

Herd immunity is the strongest aspect of whooping cough prevention as it stops it spreading if there are good levels of individual immunity. Individual immunity comes from immunization and occasional exposure to the infection which can boost immunity in those previously immunised without us being aware of it.

The current immunisation programme in all countries is designed to prevent life threatening or severe illness and deaths, which are almost always in very young children in the developed world, and is in this respect very successful. But because the vaccine does not give complete protection, it means that there will always be a certain amount of whooping cough in the general population until a more effective vaccine is produced. This is currently being worked on.

Go to page of prevention in detail

Review

This page has been reviewed and updated on 15 April 2024