South Africa sees surge in rubella cases

The Western Cape, KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng have recorded the majority of the increasing number of laboratory-confirmed cases of rubella around the country, says the Department of Health.

The Western Cape, KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng have recorded the majority of the increasing number of laboratory-confirmed cases of rubella around the country, says the Department of Health.

Published 8h ago

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The Western Cape, KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng have recorded the majority of the increasing number of laboratory-confirmed cases of rubella around the country, says the Department of Health.

According to the National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD), a total number of 10137 positive cases of rubella have been identified between January and November 2024, higher than cases recorded last year.

Rubella is a highly contagious, but vaccine-preventable disease.

“Majority of cases were recorded in Gauteng and the Western Cape provinces, while more than 90% of the total cases are in children between under 15 years of age accounting to over 8300 cases, with only one patient over the age of 50 years,” the department said.

Gauteng reported 2603 cases, the Western Cape 1338, KwaZulu-Natal 1996, Eastern Cape 1113, North West 899, Northern Cape 862, Mpumalanga 665, Free State 471 and Limpopo 190.

“Although rubella in children is a mild, self-limiting illness and complications are rare, but the risk of transmission remains high among children especially because many children entered the year 2024 without prior exposure to rubella, or without being vaccinated against rubella.

“If children are not vaccinated against rubella, and never come into contact with the rubella virus through natural infection, children will remain susceptible to rubella,” the department said.

The disease spreads from person to person through droplets coughed or sneezed into the air by an infected person.

Children and pregnant women are at a higher risk of severe health complications of rubella.

Parents and caregivers are urged to closely keep an eye on the health condition of their children and look out for common symptoms which include rash, fever, sore throat, headache, cough, runny nose, swollen lymph nodes in the neck and nausea.

Symptoms develop 2 to 3 weeks after exposure.

“Rubella infection poses a risk of congenital rubella syndrome amongst pregnant mothers if they are infected in the first trimester of the pregnancy.

It can lead to birth defects in their unborn child.”

“There is no need for the public to panic, but members of the public are urged to present themselves or their loved ones with suspected rubella symptoms without delays for early detection, effective treatment and to prevent further transmission.”

Cape Times