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Protracted outbreak of S. Enteritidis PT 21c in a large Hamburg nursing home

BACKGROUND: During August 2006, a protracted outbreak of Salmonella (S.) Enteritidis infections in a large Hamburg nursing home was investigated. METHODS: A site visit of the home was conducted and food suppliers' premises tested for Salmonella. Among nursing home residents a cohort study was c...

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Autores principales: Frank, Christina, Buchholz, Udo, Maaß, Monika, Schröder, Arthur, Bracht, Karl-Hans, Domke, Paul-Gerhard, Rabsch, Wolfgang, Fell, Gerhard
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2194771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17854497
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-7-243
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author Frank, Christina
Buchholz, Udo
Maaß, Monika
Schröder, Arthur
Bracht, Karl-Hans
Domke, Paul-Gerhard
Rabsch, Wolfgang
Fell, Gerhard
author_facet Frank, Christina
Buchholz, Udo
Maaß, Monika
Schröder, Arthur
Bracht, Karl-Hans
Domke, Paul-Gerhard
Rabsch, Wolfgang
Fell, Gerhard
author_sort Frank, Christina
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: During August 2006, a protracted outbreak of Salmonella (S.) Enteritidis infections in a large Hamburg nursing home was investigated. METHODS: A site visit of the home was conducted and food suppliers' premises tested for Salmonella. Among nursing home residents a cohort study was carried out focusing on foods consumed in the three days before the first part of the outbreak. Instead of relying on residents' memory, data from the home's patient food ordering system was used as exposure data. S. Enteritidis isolates from patients and suspected food vehicles were phage typed and compared. RESULTS: Within a population of 822 nursing home residents, 94 case patients among residents (1 fatality) and 17 among staff members were counted 6 through 29 August. The outbreak peaked 7 through 9 August, two days after a spell of very warm summer weather. S. Enteritidis was consistently recovered from patients' stools throughout the outbreak. Among the food items served during 5 through 7 August, the cohort study pointed to afternoon cake on all three days as potential risk factors for disease. Investigation of the bakery supplying the cake yielded S. Enteritidis from cakes sampled 31 August. Comparison of the isolates by phage typing demonstrated both isolates from patients and the cake to be the exceedingly rare phage type 21c. CONCLUSION: Cake (various types served on various days) contaminated with S. Enteritidis were the likely vehicle of the outbreak in the nursing home. While the cakes were probably contaminated with low pathogen dose throughout the outbreak period, high ambient summer temperatures and failure to keep the cake refrigerated led to high pathogen dose in cake on some days and in some of the housing units. This would explain the initial peak of cases, but also the drawn out nature of the outbreak with cases until the end of August. Suggestions are made to nursing homes, aiding in outbreak prevention. Early outbreak detection is crucial, such that counter measures can be swift and drawn-out outbreaks of nosocomial food-borne infections avoided.
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spelling pubmed-21947712008-01-13 Protracted outbreak of S. Enteritidis PT 21c in a large Hamburg nursing home Frank, Christina Buchholz, Udo Maaß, Monika Schröder, Arthur Bracht, Karl-Hans Domke, Paul-Gerhard Rabsch, Wolfgang Fell, Gerhard BMC Public Health Research Article BACKGROUND: During August 2006, a protracted outbreak of Salmonella (S.) Enteritidis infections in a large Hamburg nursing home was investigated. METHODS: A site visit of the home was conducted and food suppliers' premises tested for Salmonella. Among nursing home residents a cohort study was carried out focusing on foods consumed in the three days before the first part of the outbreak. Instead of relying on residents' memory, data from the home's patient food ordering system was used as exposure data. S. Enteritidis isolates from patients and suspected food vehicles were phage typed and compared. RESULTS: Within a population of 822 nursing home residents, 94 case patients among residents (1 fatality) and 17 among staff members were counted 6 through 29 August. The outbreak peaked 7 through 9 August, two days after a spell of very warm summer weather. S. Enteritidis was consistently recovered from patients' stools throughout the outbreak. Among the food items served during 5 through 7 August, the cohort study pointed to afternoon cake on all three days as potential risk factors for disease. Investigation of the bakery supplying the cake yielded S. Enteritidis from cakes sampled 31 August. Comparison of the isolates by phage typing demonstrated both isolates from patients and the cake to be the exceedingly rare phage type 21c. CONCLUSION: Cake (various types served on various days) contaminated with S. Enteritidis were the likely vehicle of the outbreak in the nursing home. While the cakes were probably contaminated with low pathogen dose throughout the outbreak period, high ambient summer temperatures and failure to keep the cake refrigerated led to high pathogen dose in cake on some days and in some of the housing units. This would explain the initial peak of cases, but also the drawn out nature of the outbreak with cases until the end of August. Suggestions are made to nursing homes, aiding in outbreak prevention. Early outbreak detection is crucial, such that counter measures can be swift and drawn-out outbreaks of nosocomial food-borne infections avoided. BioMed Central 2007-09-13 /pmc/articles/PMC2194771/ /pubmed/17854497 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-7-243 Text en Copyright © 2007 Frank et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Frank, Christina
Buchholz, Udo
Maaß, Monika
Schröder, Arthur
Bracht, Karl-Hans
Domke, Paul-Gerhard
Rabsch, Wolfgang
Fell, Gerhard
Protracted outbreak of S. Enteritidis PT 21c in a large Hamburg nursing home
title Protracted outbreak of S. Enteritidis PT 21c in a large Hamburg nursing home
title_full Protracted outbreak of S. Enteritidis PT 21c in a large Hamburg nursing home
title_fullStr Protracted outbreak of S. Enteritidis PT 21c in a large Hamburg nursing home
title_full_unstemmed Protracted outbreak of S. Enteritidis PT 21c in a large Hamburg nursing home
title_short Protracted outbreak of S. Enteritidis PT 21c in a large Hamburg nursing home
title_sort protracted outbreak of s. enteritidis pt 21c in a large hamburg nursing home
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2194771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17854497
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-7-243
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