cartersmom
30-06-09, 12:26 AM
I can see why these types of stories are effective. For someones that doesn't know that adults getting their boosters will most likely not effect transmission much...this kind of heartbreak is scary for any new parent to think about.
http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,,25704340-5001021,00.html
BABY Dana McCaffery has more than 32,000 friends on Facebook, none of whom she will ever meet. But her legacy may save their lives.
Since the four-week-old baby girl died from whooping cough in March, almost 5000 people in NSW have been struck down in an epidemic few people know about despite the death of several babies around the nation.
The state toll has eclipsed the national swine flu tally but without a campaign by Dana's parents Toni and David, from Lennox Head on the Far North Coast, more parents would be in the dark.
Thousands of people have now contacted the McCafferys because they failed to realise adults need booster vaccinations and many did not know that the state was in the grip of an epidemic.
"We are so proud of our baby, we are so proud of the impact she has had on others," Mrs McCaffery said.
"She has 32,000 Facebook friends (http://www.facebook.com/s.php?ref=search&sid=966b21337fd6c97b3886c114eeccb45f&init=q&q=dana%20mccaffery#) but that doesn't even touch the size (of the support), her story has gone worldwide."
A NSW Health review into Dana's death and the whooping cough epidemic began last Monday but the McCafferys, who had no warning about the deadly disease, would like to see a swine-flu style public campaign immediately.
The report will only be ready later in the year.
"What is infuriating is they are doing a review, it will change by the end of the year," Mr McCaffery said yesterday.
"It needs to be now, not next week or next month."
Newborns such as Dana are too young for the whooping cough vaccine. Most babies go home from hospital with a whooping cough warning on medical files - advising parents and grandparents to be vaccinated - but Dana did not receive one.
and a related article:
http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,,25530718-5001031,00.html
THE alarming spread of whooping cough across NSW contains a grim lesson for those who fail to immunise their babies: they are not just putting their own children at risk, they are endangering everybody's.
Like the recent spate of swine flu cases, the whooping-cough epidemic proves we can never afford to be complacent about public health.
The 14 swine flu cases in Australia - so far - emerged just after some commentators questioned concerns about a local infection.
Reported cases: The NSW whooping cough outbreak (http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/files/2whooping.pdf)
In fact, it is now apparent that the swift and firm response of Australian health authorities was more than justified and has no doubt kept the number of cases to a minimum.
Paradoxically, the better job they do of containing the virus, the more open they are to inane claims that there's nothing to worry about.
The whooping-cough outbreak starkly proves the idiocy of this careless attitude.
This is a disease that, in modern times, has been largely confined to the Third World.
Yet in parts of NSW there has been a tenfold increase in the number of cases.
In southeast Sydney and the Illawarra, there were 1334 reported cases in the first three months of this year, compared with just 136 for the same period last year.
In western Sydney, the number was 943 compared with 138.
Other increases across the state are just as alarming.
NSW Health director of communicable diseases Jeremy McAnulty puts it bluntly:
"It's a really hard disease to battle. Unlike measles, where you have two shots and are protected for the rest of your life, with whooping cough we just don't have a vaccination that gives you life-long immunity to bring the numbers down.
"At the moment, we just don't have the technology to stop an epidemic like this."
It's a bleak warning. There is no panacea, no secret stockpile of serum, no instant cure.
Instead, what authorities have previously relied on to keep whooping-cough numbers down is the good sense and consideration of parents who immunise themselves and their children both for their own sakes and that of those around them.
It's a modest enough expectation, one might think, but amazingly some people just don't get it.
In NSW, three per cent of children are not vaccinated against whooping cough, be it because of laziness, neglect or some idiotic conviction.
Lest you think this is a negligible figure, this is 40,000 children who are all prone to a potentially fatal disease.
As if this number isn't worrying enough, on the NSW North Coast a staggering 30 per cent of children are unvaccinated.
This ought to defy belief but, sadly, it's all too real.
Disturbingly, it appears it's not that North Coast residents are 10 times lazier or more neglectful than those in the rest of the state. Rather, it seems to be because the North Coast is home to Australia's anti-vaccination lobby.
Usually, even the silliest new age philosophical or spiritual movements at least have the advantage that they don't impinge greatly on the outside world.
The anti-immunisation crowd, however, not only endanger their own children - who are obviously too young to defend themselves from their parents' stupidity - but also every child they come into contact with.
And this is no abstract argument.
A 2003 paper by Lennox Head GP Sue Page notes that as a result of the mindlessness of this stance, the North Coast has the state's highest rate of vaccine-preventable diseases.
These people are making their children, and other people's children, sick and threatening people's lives.
Dr Page, health authorities and medical experts desperately try to explain this to the anti-immunisation movement in an effort to protect them from themselves - not to mention others from them.
Despite their tireless exhortations, the immunisation rate in the area - cited as 76 to 80 per cent in 2000 - appears to have dropped in recent years.
Murwillumbah baby Dana Elizabeth McCaffery, who died from whooping cough when she was four weeks old, is the tragic result of this.
She was too young to be immunised - and there is no suggestion of any neglect on the part of her poor parents - but was the person she caught it from? And the person who gave it to them?
Diseases such as smallpox, polio and - until recently - whooping cough have been largely consigned to the past because of scientists, governments, doctors and citizens playing their part to eradicate them for all our sakes.
The efforts of a lunatic minority to bring this undone are almost homicidally idiotic.
I can't believe they publish crap like this!!!
http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,,25704340-5001021,00.html
BABY Dana McCaffery has more than 32,000 friends on Facebook, none of whom she will ever meet. But her legacy may save their lives.
Since the four-week-old baby girl died from whooping cough in March, almost 5000 people in NSW have been struck down in an epidemic few people know about despite the death of several babies around the nation.
The state toll has eclipsed the national swine flu tally but without a campaign by Dana's parents Toni and David, from Lennox Head on the Far North Coast, more parents would be in the dark.
Thousands of people have now contacted the McCafferys because they failed to realise adults need booster vaccinations and many did not know that the state was in the grip of an epidemic.
"We are so proud of our baby, we are so proud of the impact she has had on others," Mrs McCaffery said.
"She has 32,000 Facebook friends (http://www.facebook.com/s.php?ref=search&sid=966b21337fd6c97b3886c114eeccb45f&init=q&q=dana%20mccaffery#) but that doesn't even touch the size (of the support), her story has gone worldwide."
A NSW Health review into Dana's death and the whooping cough epidemic began last Monday but the McCafferys, who had no warning about the deadly disease, would like to see a swine-flu style public campaign immediately.
The report will only be ready later in the year.
"What is infuriating is they are doing a review, it will change by the end of the year," Mr McCaffery said yesterday.
"It needs to be now, not next week or next month."
Newborns such as Dana are too young for the whooping cough vaccine. Most babies go home from hospital with a whooping cough warning on medical files - advising parents and grandparents to be vaccinated - but Dana did not receive one.
and a related article:
http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,,25530718-5001031,00.html
THE alarming spread of whooping cough across NSW contains a grim lesson for those who fail to immunise their babies: they are not just putting their own children at risk, they are endangering everybody's.
Like the recent spate of swine flu cases, the whooping-cough epidemic proves we can never afford to be complacent about public health.
The 14 swine flu cases in Australia - so far - emerged just after some commentators questioned concerns about a local infection.
Reported cases: The NSW whooping cough outbreak (http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/files/2whooping.pdf)
In fact, it is now apparent that the swift and firm response of Australian health authorities was more than justified and has no doubt kept the number of cases to a minimum.
Paradoxically, the better job they do of containing the virus, the more open they are to inane claims that there's nothing to worry about.
The whooping-cough outbreak starkly proves the idiocy of this careless attitude.
This is a disease that, in modern times, has been largely confined to the Third World.
Yet in parts of NSW there has been a tenfold increase in the number of cases.
In southeast Sydney and the Illawarra, there were 1334 reported cases in the first three months of this year, compared with just 136 for the same period last year.
In western Sydney, the number was 943 compared with 138.
Other increases across the state are just as alarming.
NSW Health director of communicable diseases Jeremy McAnulty puts it bluntly:
"It's a really hard disease to battle. Unlike measles, where you have two shots and are protected for the rest of your life, with whooping cough we just don't have a vaccination that gives you life-long immunity to bring the numbers down.
"At the moment, we just don't have the technology to stop an epidemic like this."
It's a bleak warning. There is no panacea, no secret stockpile of serum, no instant cure.
Instead, what authorities have previously relied on to keep whooping-cough numbers down is the good sense and consideration of parents who immunise themselves and their children both for their own sakes and that of those around them.
It's a modest enough expectation, one might think, but amazingly some people just don't get it.
In NSW, three per cent of children are not vaccinated against whooping cough, be it because of laziness, neglect or some idiotic conviction.
Lest you think this is a negligible figure, this is 40,000 children who are all prone to a potentially fatal disease.
As if this number isn't worrying enough, on the NSW North Coast a staggering 30 per cent of children are unvaccinated.
This ought to defy belief but, sadly, it's all too real.
Disturbingly, it appears it's not that North Coast residents are 10 times lazier or more neglectful than those in the rest of the state. Rather, it seems to be because the North Coast is home to Australia's anti-vaccination lobby.
Usually, even the silliest new age philosophical or spiritual movements at least have the advantage that they don't impinge greatly on the outside world.
The anti-immunisation crowd, however, not only endanger their own children - who are obviously too young to defend themselves from their parents' stupidity - but also every child they come into contact with.
And this is no abstract argument.
A 2003 paper by Lennox Head GP Sue Page notes that as a result of the mindlessness of this stance, the North Coast has the state's highest rate of vaccine-preventable diseases.
These people are making their children, and other people's children, sick and threatening people's lives.
Dr Page, health authorities and medical experts desperately try to explain this to the anti-immunisation movement in an effort to protect them from themselves - not to mention others from them.
Despite their tireless exhortations, the immunisation rate in the area - cited as 76 to 80 per cent in 2000 - appears to have dropped in recent years.
Murwillumbah baby Dana Elizabeth McCaffery, who died from whooping cough when she was four weeks old, is the tragic result of this.
She was too young to be immunised - and there is no suggestion of any neglect on the part of her poor parents - but was the person she caught it from? And the person who gave it to them?
Diseases such as smallpox, polio and - until recently - whooping cough have been largely consigned to the past because of scientists, governments, doctors and citizens playing their part to eradicate them for all our sakes.
The efforts of a lunatic minority to bring this undone are almost homicidally idiotic.
I can't believe they publish crap like this!!!