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Some Students Excluded From Schools During Whooping Cough Outbreak

As graduation approaches, some seniors have come down with highly contagious pertussis.
Shutterstock
As graduation approaches, some seniors have come down with highly contagious pertussis.

As of Tuesday, May 22, 2018, there are 91 confirmed cases of whooping cough across five school districts in Lane County. In an effort to quell the outbreak, Public Health departments have ordered un-immunized and sick students to be excluded from school.

As graduation approaches, some seniors have come down with highly contagious pertussis.
Credit Shutterstock
As graduation approaches, some seniors have come down with highly contagious pertussis.

Lane County Public Health uses a number of tools to end outbreaks. Early diagnosis, case investigation, vaccines and exclusion. When an outbreak is confirmed in a school, the priority is keeping students and staff safe. In the current whooping cough outbreak, all 91 students in 25 schools were asked not to come back unless they receive antibiotic treatment or immunization.  

Students who are not up to date on their vaccines have also been excluded until they are immunized or wait out the 21 day incubation period.

“It certainly is not a decision that public health takes lightly.” Cindy Morgan is Communicable Disease Supervisor for Lane County. “We do know that if we exclude students then we tend to stop the spread of illness in that school population.”

At the KLCC Studios: Cindy Morgan, Communicable Disease Supervisor for Lane County Public Health.
Credit Tiffany Eckert
At the KLCC Studios: Cindy Morgan, Communicable Disease Supervisor for Lane County Public Health.

Morgan acknowledges this is a tough time to be kept out of school with year-end and graduation approaching. She says most parents and students have been understanding of the public health response to this epidemic.

Copyright 2018 KLCC

Tiffany joined the KLCC News team in 2007. She studied journalism at the University of Missouri-Columbia and has worked in a variety of media including television and daily print news. For KLCC, Tiffany reports on health care, social justice and local/regional news. She has won awards from Oregon Associated Press, PRNDI, and Education Writers Association.