The number of whooping cough cases this year has surpassed 1000, and the health agency is urging people to get vaccinated against the disease.
Officials declared a national whooping cough epidemic last Friday after weeks of consistently high case numbers, hospitalisations and unlinked outbreaks.
The latest figures from ESR show 77 cases were reported last week, which includes four hospitalised cases – three of which were under the age of 1.
That was down slightly on the two weeks prior – but immunisation leader Nikki Turner said the epidemic would be long and slow, lasting up to 18 months.
Last week's cases brought the total number of cases this year to 1009, Health NZ/Te Whatu Ora public health medicine specialist Dr Matt Reid said.
A total of 63 people infected were under 12 months old, and almost three-quarters of those were hospitalised, he said.
"It's incredibly important that we do all we can to get our hapū māmā immunised," Reid said.
"Newborn babies aged under six weeks are particularly vulnerable, with Māori and Pacific babies at high risk from whooping cough.
"By getting immunised when you're pregnant, you will protect your pēpi until they can have their first immunisations when they are six weeks old."
Nearly 42,000 cases of the highly-infectious disease recorded in 2024 up to November 8, according to Australia's National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System.
World
Tue, Nov 26
Over the past four weeks, there were 263 cases - the highest number of cases over a four-week period to date for all of 2024.
Health
Fri, Nov 22
The "reset" – to cut millions of dollars off the National Public Health Service budget – would go ahead before Christmas.
Health
Sat, Nov 23
rnz.co.nz