PHARMAC Moves to Protect Babies from Whooping Cough
PHARMAC Moves to Protect Babies from Whooping
Cough
PHARMAC will extend funding to a
type of antibiotic that can be used to treat and prevent
pertussis (whooping cough) in children under
one.
The decision to fund azithromycin follows
growing concern over rates of whooping cough and advice from
both PHARMAC’s clinical advisory committee PTAC and the
Ministry of Health that there was an urgent public health
requirement for such a treatment.
PHARMAC’s
medical director Dr Peter Moodie says the agency has moved
quickly to make azithromycin available for
children.
“Whooping cough can be very serious and
even fatal in young children, so making this treatment
available is an important step,” says Dr Moodie. “The
best defence against whooping cough continues to be
immunisation, but it is also important to have treatments
for when infections do occur.
“Our funding
decision means that children under one year will be able to
be treated with azithromycin if they have whooping cough, or
if they come into contact with someone with whooping cough.
This will help give them additional protection from
infection.”
Dr Moodie says that despite high
rates of immunisation, whooping cough continues to be
present in the community.
Starship Hospital
paediatrician Emma Best has welcomed the funding
decision.
"The current treatment, erythromycin, had
troublesome side effects in young babies - these are the
very group of children most at risk from whooping cough,”
says Dr Best.
“Azithromycin is as effective and
is able to be given once a day, as well as in a shorter
course for both treatment and prevention if a little baby is
exposed to whooping cough."
PHARMAC will begin
funding azithromycin for whooping cough from 1
June.
ENDS