A foodborne outbreak of Norwalk virus gastroenteritis. Evidence for post-recovery transmission.
暂无分享,去创建一个
From November 10-16, 1982, 220 (57%) of 383 attendees at eight banquets for which food had been prepared at a single hotel restaurant and the employees of the hotel had onset of Norwalk virus gastroenteritis. Epidemiologic investigation of the three largest banquets confirmed consumption of potato and fruit salads (banquet A), coleslaw (banquet B), and tossed salad (banquet C) to be significantly associated with illness. Between November 8-19, similar illness occurred in seven (54%) of 13 hotel kitchen employees. The foods implicated in banquets A and B were prepared by one salad worker during her acute illness and up to 48 hours following her recovery. A second salad worker prepared the implicated tossed salad for banquet C 24 hours following her recovery. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first foodborne outbreak investigation demonstrating Norwalk viral excretion and transmission by a food handler after recovery from illness and either person-to-person or vehicle-borne transmission between food handlers with subsequent transmission by more than one food handler to patrons.