Whooping cough cases are rising again in the US
[April 25, 2025]
By DEVNA BOSE
Whooping cough cases are rising, and doctors are bracing for yet another
tough year.
There have been 8,485 cases reported in 2025, according to preliminary
data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That’s
twice as many cases as this time last year, based on the CDC's final
tally.
Rates of whooping cough, or pertussis, soared last year, which experts
said wasn’t unexpected. The number of cases fell during COVID-19 because
of masking and social distancing. Plus, experts said, the illness peaks
every two to five years.
But experts say the outbreaks of vaccine-preventable illnesses, like
measles and whooping cough, could be indicative of changing attitudes
toward vaccines. U.S. kindergarten vaccination rates fell last year, and
the number of children with vaccine exemptions hit an all-time high.
“There’s unfortunately been increasing anti-vaccine sentiment in the
United States,” said Dr. Ericka Hayes at the Children’s Hospital of
Philadelphia. “Our recovery is not nearly as quick as we expected it to
be and we needed it to be. And again, when you fall below 95% for
vaccinations, you lose that herd immunity protection.”
Whooping cough tends to peak around this time of year and in the fall.
It's usually spread through respiratory droplets in the air, when people
with pertussis cough, sneeze or breathe close to others. The symptoms
are similar to a cold but the cough becomes increasingly severe with a
distinctive sound — a “whoop” as the person tries to take in air. It is
treated with antibiotics.

In the past six months, two babies in Louisiana and a 5-year-old in
Washington state have died from whooping cough.
The pertussis vaccine, which also protects against diphtheria and
tetanus, is given at two months, four months and six months. The CDC
recommends adults get follow-up doses every 10 years.
The illness is most dangerous for infants, especially before they
receive their first round of vaccinations. That’s why the vaccine is
also recommended for expecting mothers — it can protect newborns. But
not enough people are getting the vaccine during pregnancy, said Hayes,
who is the hospital's senior medical director of infection prevention
and control.
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This 2016 illustration provided by the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, based on electron microscope imagery, depicts
Bordetella pertussis bacteria, which causes whooping cough.
(Meredith Newlove/CDC via AP, File)

“The uptake of the vaccine for pregnant mothers is not where we need to
be at all," she said.
Pennsylvania, one of the states hit hardest by the illness last year,
has recorded 207 whooping cough cases in 2025.
Neil Ruhland, a state health department spokesman, said the biggest
increases are in populated areas like Philadelphia and Pittsburgh and in
middle and high schools and colleges. He said 94.6% of the state's
kindergarteners are vaccinated.
Michigan is on track for a similar pertussis season to last year's, said
Dr. Natasha Bagdasarian, the state's chief medical executive. The state
has recorded 516 cases thus far, mostly among children aged 5 to 17, and
saw a total of 2,081 cases in 2024.
Bagdasarian said vaccination rates vary from county to county. Some
schools have rates as low as 30%, creating pockets of vulnerable
communities to vaccine-preventable diseases like pertussis and measles,
she said.
“We’re watching pertussis numbers very carefully, but a lot of our
resources are going into contact tracing our measles cases right now,”
she said. “And public health is doing much more with fewer resources in
2025 than we’ve had to do before."
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AP data journalist Kasturi Pananjady contributed to this report.
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