How To Use Whooping cough In A Sentence
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There was no report on diphtheria, rabies, tetanus or whooping cough during the study period.
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You kin cure whooping cough wif dis flower if you ain't got nothin ' better handy.
PAINT THE WIND
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Children survived as a result of a combined effect of sulfa drugs, vaccinations for whooping cough and measles, antibiotics, and corticosteroids.
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At least 90% of children with cough have a respiratory tract infection such as a cold, croup, bronchitis, bronchiolitis, whooping cough, or pneumonia.
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Always the playful neologist (pertussion is his coinage from the technical term for whooping cough, pertussis), Wallace has lately become a professor of literature.
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Other causes of encephalitis include influenza, listeriosis, brucellosis, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, whooping cough, rabies and lead poisoning.
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Because of vaccine shortages, such diseases as whooping cough, measles, mumps, and even polio (which had been all but eradicated) have also increased.
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Daniel's bout with whooping cough has taught me firsthand the consequences of rejecting immunization as part of a lifestyle choice, and the limitations of believing in immunization as an invincible protective shield.
Whooping Cough
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The vaccine can be given at the same time as immunisations against diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus.
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Whooping cough is still a menace to British babies despite widespread use of vaccinations, research revealed yesterday.
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I dread the warm season on account of its summer-complaints; and the cold for its croups, scarlet fevers, measles, and whooping cough.
Hubert's Wife A Story for You
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No surprise, then, to read recent reports suggesting that whooping cough may be on the rise.
The Sun
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The Doctors said I had whooping cough and pneumonia and that I would have to stay in hospital for the next few months.
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It is specific for asthma and oppressed breathing, hiccup, whooping cough, spasmodic croup, tetanus, hydrophobia, hysteria paroxysms and hysterical convulsions.
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Various parts of the butterbur plant have been used for centuries to treat bronchial asthma and whooping cough, and in folk medicine the leaves of the plant were used as a mucus-reducing cough remedy.
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Whooping cough, also known as pertussis, can be a serious illness, especially in the very young.
WalesOnline - Home
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Is she at risk of catching whooping cough?
Times, Sunday Times
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At that time whooping cough was rife at school, with three weeks' isolation for the victim.
Lost Voices of the Edwardians: 19011910 in the words of the Men & Women Who Were There
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Is she at risk of catching whooping cough?
Times, Sunday Times
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In the Bay Area, cases of whooping cough otherwise known as pertussis are up nearly sixfold to 173 through May this year compared with the same period in 2009.
Whooping Cough Afflicts Region
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You kin cure whooping cough wif dis flower if you ain't got nothin ' better handy.
PAINT THE WIND
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Other conditions that can cause fevers are tonsillitis, kidney or urinary infections, or any of the common childhood diseases such as measles, mumps, chicken pox and whooping cough.
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No surprise, then, to read recent reports suggesting that whooping cough may be on the rise.
The Sun
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That was when whooping cough, measles, mumps, rubella, polio, diphtheria and smallpox were routine.
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Another possibility, though, is whooping cough.
The Sun
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The serum was also used in vaccines against measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria and whooping cough until as late as 1993.
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Our study did not look at the effectiveness of whooping cough vaccines.
Times, Sunday Times
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Other causes of encephalitis include influenza, listeriosis, brucellosis, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, whooping cough, rabies and lead poisoning.
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Another possibility, though, is whooping cough.
The Sun
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I had whooping cough, was sick for a week or two and convalesced in bed under the lilac tree in our back yard.
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Whooping cough, also known as pertussis, is a bacterial infection that causes uncontrollable, severe coughing.
Reuters: Press Release
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She was given a needle for whooping cough.
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Always the playful neologist (pertussion is his coinage from the technical term for whooping cough, pertussis), Wallace has lately become a professor of literature.
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You kin cure whooping cough wif dis flower if you ain't got nothin ' better handy.
PAINT THE WIND
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Since then, vaccine use has risen to near 100 per cent and cases of whooping cough are down to a few hundred a year.
Times, Sunday Times
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On the banks of the Nanay and Itaya rivers he identified ferns used to treat whooping cough, orchids effective in the treatment of boils, and a rare variegated calathea known as tigrepanga employed as an admixture to ayahuasca.
One River
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From October babies in the UK will be given a five-in-one vaccine to protect them against polio, diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough and Hib, a virus which can lead to meningitis.
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There was no report on diphtheria, rabies, tetanus or whooping cough during the study period.
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Tito's government significantly raised the standard of health, eliminating diseases such as typhus, tuberculosis, and whooping cough.
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Active immunization by vaccination with tetanus toxoid (an inactivated form of the toxin) is now usual in childhood, along with diphtheria and whooping cough vaccines.
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He was an early champion for the introduction of safer whooping cough vaccines, called acellular vaccines.
Undefined
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She asked me why I thought it had been whooping cough.
Alternative Health Care for Children
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Among vaccine-preventable childhood diseases, only measles was reported, but no diphtheria, tetanus or whooping cough.
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The principal recorded killers were smallpox, influenza, measles, typhoid, typhus, chickenpox, whooping cough, tuberculosis and syphilis.
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Children survived as a result of a combined effect of sulfa drugs, vaccinations for whooping cough and measles, antibiotics, and corticosteroids.
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Infectious diseases such as whooping cough, encephalitis, poliomyelitis, diphtheria, rabies, tetanus, syphilis, and botulism rarely are seen now but can cause vocal cord paralysis.
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That's because children were vulnerable to infectious diseases such as scarlet fever, diphtheria, whooping cough and measles.
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At that time whooping cough was rife at school, with three weeks' isolation for the victim.
Lost Voices of the Edwardians: 19011910 in the words of the Men & Women Who Were There
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Indeed, no case of tetanus, diphtheria or whooping cough was reported over the two years under study.
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Ministers, who will formally announce the plan tomorrow, insist the quintuple jab is safe, and a positive development for parents because it replaces the whooping cough vaccine, which contained mercury.
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For spasmodic coughs and whooping coughs, thyme is very effective as well, but it can be enhanced by giving five drops of tincture of lobelia, which is a powerful antipasmodic.
THE NATURAL REMEDY BIBLE
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Tetanus, also known as "lockjaw;" Diphtheria, an upper respiratory disease; and Pertussis, also known as "whooping cough.
News for Opelika-Auburn News
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Another possibility, though, is whooping cough.
The Sun
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Our study did not look at the effectiveness of whooping cough vaccines.
Times, Sunday Times
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He had his first seizure within hours of receiving a vaccine for diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough.
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Soon after the paper's publication, British television aired a program on the whooping cough vaccine.
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Another possibility, though, is whooping cough.
The Sun
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Briar, as caused by the puncture of an insect, and which is known as the canker, or "robin redbreast's cushion," is frequently worn round the neck as a protective amulet against whooping cough.
Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure
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The serum was also used in vaccines against measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria and whooping cough until as late as 1993.
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A look back through the meticulously archived school records shows youngsters' sick notes reporting everything from whooping cough, mumps and measles to scarlet fever and typhoid as lethal epidemics tore through the school.
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Johnny would probably get pneumonia, or a childhood disease such as whooping cough or measles, and die.
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She was given a needle for whooping cough.
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Eucalyptus has for a long time been known as a remedy for easing bronchial problems such as asthma, emphysema, chronic bronchitis, whooping cough and chronic catarrh.
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Since then, vaccine use has risen to near 100 per cent and cases of whooping cough are down to a few hundred a year.
Times, Sunday Times
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Babies with whooping cough can develop pneumonia, bronchiectasis (pockets of infection form in the small airways of the lungs) and/or collapsed lung.
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They are: diphtheria, a respiratory infection; tetanus, which is also known as lockjaw; and pertussis, which is also known as whooping cough.
Beatrice Daily Sun News Articles
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CARLISLE - Two cases of whooping cough have been reported in Carlisle schools, according to the superintendent.
Middletownjournal.com - News
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When vaccine rates drop, deadly diseases can re-emerge – as we've seen recently with the whooping cough epidemic in California.
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She asked me why I thought it had been whooping cough.
Alternative Health Care for Children
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An early report in the Journal of the American Medical Association recommended diamorphine for the treatment of bronchitis, pneumonia, whooping cough, laryngitis, and hay fever.
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Scarlet fever, mumps, chicken pox, and whooping cough floated in the air.
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The serum was also used in vaccines against measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria and whooping cough until as late as 1993.
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Whooping cough occurs mainly in young children.
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After all, wouldn't you rather listen to a lie and let your children suffer polio, rubella, rubeola, mumps, hepatitis B, the whooping cough, varicella, variola, and so on?
Bad Astronomy
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We're talking about diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, which also is known as pertussis, polio and hepatitis b.
CNN Transcript Dec 17, 2002