Ive never heard of this and never had my doctor say one word about this. Well my MIL heard from her regular doctor that they needed to get it ASAP if they were going to be around our infants. Now she is freaking out that the entire family needs to get this if they are going to be around the babies. Has anyone heard of this/did your doctor tell you and your family to get this vaccine? I keep looking up information and its not very helpful! I know that whooping cough is very dangerous but Im a little confused why no one has mentioned this vaccine to me..
Re: Whooping cough vaccine/ Pertussis?
It's currently recommended adults get a pertussis vax because the ones received as children may have worn off. There are pertussis outbreaks in parts of the country. Babies don't get the first pertussis shot until their 2 month WBV.
I got my shot in the hospital before I was discharged with the babies. DH got his a few weeks before the babies were born. We asked all family members that were going to be in close contact with the babies to get the shot, too.
my doctors didn't mention it either, but there were a ton of PSAs on TV when my kids were born about the importance, so I took it upon myself to get vaccinated (DH too) and asked our nanny to get it as well.
BFP #2 10/13/2009 on our 2nd Wedding Anniversary
Discovered TWINS during the 6w u/s - what a shocker!
Delivered on 5/19/2010 at 34 weeks due to pre-e and HELLP syndrome
The Bump MoM Recipe Collection
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/vpd-vac/pertussis/default.htm
There's lots of info and links from the CDC.
My husband and I both had boosters some time ago - his because he's military, mine because my asthma doctor recommended it. My parents recently got the vaccine for the babies, since they'll be around them when they are really young. I think they got theirs for free through the county health department.
I'm pretty sure the adult vaccine doesn't prevent you from being a carrier & transmitting it to the babies, so it would only be effective for you (& it's pretty rare/mild in most adults, I think).
I could be completely wrong, but I seem to remember reading about this at some point.
I'm not sure where you heard this, but getting the vaccine does help prevent you from getting it, which helps prevent you from passing it onto babies. Its true that its pretty mild in adults, but the risk is to the babies.
Considering the amount of press this has gotten in the last several years, it is too bad that your Dr did not mention it and especially that it was not offered in the hospital after you delivered b/c that really should be standard practice now. You should definitely get it & YH too and anyone else caring for the babies. In addition to protecting your kids, you're contributing to protecting the health of the public & restoring herd immunity, which we are slowly losing as evidenced by the outbreaks.