Norovirus

  • Posted: July 16th, 2012 - 12:00am by Doug Powell

    The Jackson County Health Department in Wisconsin began an investigation Monday, July 9, after receiving notification of several persons who became ill after swimming in Lake Wazee Beach area on July 4th. Initially food poisoning was suspected, however, after investigation, the water in the beach area is thought to be a potential source for illness.

    To date there have been over 170 persons confirmed ill with vomiting, diarrhea, headache, nausea, stomachache fever and body aches. Illness does seem to be resolving itself in most persons after about 24-36 hours.

    Testing of lake water by U.S. Department of Agriculture officials has not proven any conclusive organism, however markers for fecal contaminants were found to be present in the beach water. E. coli and blue green algae appear not to be factors in causing the illness. Norovirus is being suspected due to onset and symptoms of ill individuals. Samples from several ill persons have been sent to the WI State Lab of Hygiene for testing and results are pending.

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  • Posted: June 30th, 2012 - 3:42pm by Doug Powell

    Basketball would be more interesting with full body contact; although full vomiting counts.

    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control reports that on February 6, 2012, the Kentucky Department for Public Health was notified by a local health department of multiple cases of vomiting and diarrhea among participants in a statewide, 7th grade boys' basketball tournament that was held February 3–5.

    Among 52 participating teams, 49 (94%) teams (comprising 573 players) were contacted. Thirty-six teams (73%) reported at least one ill player. Sixty-two employees were identified who had worked at the tournament, and 46 (74%) were interviewed. A total of 242 persons with acute gastroenteritis were identified and interviewed, including 154 (27%) of the 573 players, 12 (26%) of the 46 employees, 11 coaches, and 65 spectators (the total numbers of coaches and spectators attending could not be determined). Nineteen (8%) persons with AGE had sought medical care, including two children who were hospitalized. Three persons from three separate teams had experienced illness onset before the tournament, and one had vomited courtside in a crowded gymnasium on the first night of the tournament. The vomitus was cleaned up by tournament attendees, and janitorial staff members were notified 3 days later. Symptom onset occurred among 196 (81%) ill persons on days 2 and 3 after the vomiting episode. No common food or water sources were identified as potential vehicles for transmission.

    Six stool specimens were collected from five players and one spectator; all tested positive for norovirus. Five were sent to CDC for sequencing, and results yielded the identical genogroup II type 7 (GII.7) strain, a relatively rare norovirus strain. These confirmed cases represented players or spectators from four different teams. The three persons who had arrived at the tournament with gastrointestinal symptoms were unable to provide stool specimens for norovirus testing. However, three of the six confirmed stool specimens came from participants who had played on the court where the vomiting episode occurred.

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  • Posted: June 30th, 2012 - 3:25pm by Doug Powell

    Portions of Davenport University's student center, gymnasium, and a dormitory are closed for extensive cleaning after teenagers on campus for a cheerleading camp were affected by an outbreak of norovirus.

    About 35-40 high school girls were affected by the outbreak, which began late Tuesday or early Wednesday. They suffered diarrhea, vomiting and stomach cramps, according to Kent County Health Department spokeswoman Lisa LaPlante, though none of the victims required medical treatment or hospitalization.

    The girls were attending a cheerleading camp that began Tuesday, LaPlante says.
    Davenport officials believe the virus was spread through hand-to-hand contact -- likely when the girls were passing pom-poms. The health department has ruled out the likelihood of foodborne transmission.

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  • Posted: June 28th, 2012 - 5:30am by Doug Powell

    Daughter Courtlynn left for summer camp yesterday where she will finally get to be a councilor in the Muskokas of Ontario (that’s in Canada).

    But every time she goes to camp, there’s an outbreak of something that makes me question what these guardians of our children know about food safety (no more or less than anyone else, I guess).

    Indiana’s news leader, WSBT, reports that more than 100 middle and high school students participating in summer sports camps at the University of Notre Dame became suddenly ill early Wednesday morning. Some were so sick they had to be hospitalized.

    The big question neither the St. Joseph County health officer nor the university could answer Wednesday was exactly what caused more than 100 teenagers to become ill with stomach flu-like symptoms such as nausea, vomiting and body aches?

    Indiana’s Department of Health and the St. Joseph County Health Department are testing stool samples and food the campers ate to see whether the illnesses were caused by a nasty stomach bug or food poisoning.

    It’s a summer camp 13-year-old Chicago friends Elaine Johnson and Maeve Sheehan will always remember.

    “I just kind of woke up [in the middle of the night] and started to have a sick feeling,” Johnson said. “The coaches brought us out into the hallway and every single girl had a small trash can. And everybody had a little pillow and blanket there and we were all just kind of throwing up everywhere.”

    Suddenly, several of their lacrosse camp friends were also getting sick.

    “I don’t know, I was kind of scared a little. It was weird,” Sheehan recalled.
    She began vomiting hours later.

    “Everybody was puking last night,” added football camper Alex Bradt, from Chaffield, MN. Bradt did not become ill, but he noted his camp did not have enough players to create teams for a scheduled scrimmage Wednesday because so many of the teens were sick.

    Here’s the video from Indiana’s other news leader, ABC57.

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  • Posted: June 15th, 2012 - 9:50pm by Doug Powell

    County environmental health officials have ordered the closing of a popular Walnut Creek pizza restaurant after test results confirmed that customers and restaurant staff have norovirus.

    Contra Costa County Environmental Health Director Marilyn Underwood said the county ordered California Pizza Kitchen at Broadway Plaza, Walnut Creek, closed at 5 p.m. Thursday after receiving lab resulting confirming norovirus.

    County officials have linked the norovirus to a foodborne illness outbreak connected with salad served Thursday, June 7, at the California Pizza Kitchen at Broadway Plaza, Walnut Creek.

    County officials went to the restaurant Thursday evening and posted a notice closing the restaurant under the authority of state law. They asked the staff to close the restaurant. The staff quietly asked customers to leave, Underwood said.
    The first batch of samples came back Thursday. Of five employees tested, three positive for norovirus, Underwood said. Of two customers tested, both were positive for norovirus.

    Underwood said staffers have interviewed 11 people who ate salad at CPK June 7 and subsequently suffered gastrointestinal symptoms.

    The county is looking for other people who ate at CPK that day or in subsequent days and may have suffered gastrointestinal symptoms. They are asked to call the Environmental Health Division of Contra Costa Health Services in Concord at (925) 692-2500.

    The Environmental Health Division received complaints and visited the restaurant Tuesday. In their inspections and observations, they have suggested several improvements in food handling and hygiene for restaurant workers to make, Underwood said. California Pizza Kitchen staff have been cooperative, Underwood said.

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  • Posted: June 15th, 2012 - 3:41am by Doug Powell

    Health workers in northern Arizona were waiting Thursday for test results to confirm whether the flu-like illness known as norovirus has surfaced among boaters in the Grand Canyon.

    The Arizona Daily Sun reports Coconino County health officials were investigating facilities along the Colorado River after two river-running companies each described a trip where passengers and crew experienced nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.

    One boating trip on June 7 reported all but two of its crew members were taken ill with those symptoms. The other company said people on an excursion in May had the same symptoms.

    Trish Lees, a Coconino County Health Services Department spokeswoman, said county workers have taken samples from latrines, restrooms provided by the boating companies as well as waste from sick passengers.

    Health officials said keeping the norovirus from spreading on a rafting boat is challenging because passengers are sharing the same space and surfaces. David Wong, a doctor and medical epidemiologist for the National Park Service, overseeing Grand Canyon, said one or two infected passengers could easily have led to the virus being transmitted to others.

    "It's very difficult to have good hygiene," Wong said. "People have close quarters. They're sharing the same bathroom facilities."

    In the summer of 2005, nearly 100 boaters became sick on the Colorado River, according to officials. That same year, 115 people attending a wrestling camp at Northern Arizona University also came down with the virus. As a result, several campus facilities had to be disinfected after wrestlers disregarded instructions to avoid public contact. The Arizona Cardinals relocated their training camp to Prescott as a precaution.

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  • Posted: June 9th, 2012 - 9:07pm by Doug Powell

    Beaches Turks and Caicos Resort and Spa has postponed its reopening until June 13 after confirmation from the Ministry of Health that 10 cases of norovirus have been confirmed.

    The country’s largest resort located on Providenciales had announced June 3 that it stopped accepting reservations until June 9 after guests and employees were stricken.

    Norovirus can be transmitted from person to person through contact with vomitus or feces of infected individuals, consumption of contaminated food or water, contact with soiled surfaces and bed linens and other items. Other than supportive therapy, norovirus usually requires little by way of medical interventions and usually resolves without incident.

    The resort said 39 people (1.35 percent) of guests and staff complained of the illness in the week beginning May 21, and 94 people (3.15 percent) reported the symptoms during the following week.

    “The comprehensive disinfection includes a complete sterilization of all public areas, complete stripping and sterilizing of all accommodations, sterilizing of all cushions, mattresses and couches, the removal and isolated sterilization of all linen, curtain and drapes as well as the quarantining of all rooms to ensure that no traces of the virus remain,” Beaches said in the statement.

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  • Posted: June 6th, 2012 - 4:04pm by Ben Chapman

    Author: 
    Ben Chapman

    With the Stanley Cup Finals set to end tonight (I'm not convinced New Jersey will prolong the inevitable), my sports-watching efforts will soon switch to Euro 2012 soccer (or non-American football). It's not the most exciting sport but I do like the lack of commercial breaks. According to Sports Illustrated, co-host Ukraine's team has been hit by some sort of pathogen that is affecting 10 players and almost cancelled a warm-up game yesterday. Lots of vomit associated with a team sport? Sounds like norovirus.

    The main concern is over Ukraine's most-capped player, midfielder Anatoliy Tymoshchuk, who has been on a drip.
    "We have to bring the guys out of this condition,'' coach Oleg Blokhin said. "It's good that the poisoning didn't happen on June 11. For me, the most important thing is healthy footballers.''

    Team doctor Leonid Mironov told reporters Wednesday that Tuesday's match against Turkey, which Ukraine lost 2-0, was almost cancelled after the players had come down with the bug that was causing some of them to vomit. Blokhin said that fullback Bohdan Butko and midfielder Denys Harmash played against Turkey despite being ill.

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  • Posted: June 3rd, 2012 - 4:58am by Doug Powell

    More than 100 people connected to the Gleneagles Hotel have been hit by a suspected norovirus outbreak.

    Scotsman.com reports the luxury Auchterarder venue is working with NHS Tayside to identify the cause of the cases of vomiting and diarrhea and put in place infection-control measures.

    Most of the cases only came to light after guests who had stayed there last weekend contacted the hotel after falling ill.

    Some staff and hotel residents are still recovering, but an NHS spokeswoman said nobody had been taken to hospital.

    A spokeswoman for Gleneagles said a “mix” of residents, guests and staff were affected.

    The hotel is home to Scotland’s only two-star Michelin star restaurant, Andrew Fairlie at Gleneagles. The prestigious hotel has played host to major golf tournaments and the international G8 summit in 2005.

    It will also host the Ryder Cup golf tournament in 2014.

     

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  • Posted: May 9th, 2012 - 1:47am by Doug Powell

    I was sitting on the toilet this morning, answering e-mail while trying to hurry things up and get Sorenne to school, and I responded to an e-mail from a reporter at msnbc by saying, “don’t take reusable grocery bags to the bathroom.”

    I could have said, don’t take groceries to the bathroom: I’ve seen it.

    In 2010, seven of 17 players on a youth girls soccer team in Oregon fell ill while attending an out-of-state tournament. But, as investigators discovered, none of the players had been in direct contact with the index case -- the first girl to get sick.

    Investigators were stumped.

    Kimberly K. Repp, PhD, an epidemiologist with the Washington County Department of Health and Human Services in Hillsboro, Ore. said, "We conducted a very extensive interview; it's called a shotgun interview, where we ask about every possible food exposure. There are over 800 questions on the questionnaire.”

    That helped the researchers figure out what the sick people ate and what the healthy people didn't eat.

    According to a new study in today’s Journal of Infectious Diseases, authored by Repp and Bill Keene, all the girls who got sick had eaten cookies during a Sunday lunch. By Tuesday, those cookies, along with much of the other foods the girls had eaten during their stay, had been thrown away.

    The connection turned out to be a reusable grocery tote bag filled with the cookies and other food items like chips and grapes that had been sitting on the floor of the bathroom where the first girl had repeatedly gotten sick.

    Investigators swabbed the bag two weeks after the first person fell ill. DNA tests turned up copies of the same strain of norovirus that had infected the girls.

    "This is the first-ever reported case of transmitting this virus with an inanimate object, basically," Repp says.

    The first sick girl said she never touched the bag. So how did the virus get there?

    Experts say viral particles likely floated over from the toilet.

    All the girls had traveled in private automobiles, shared hotel rooms, and eaten at local restaurants. Eight cases were identified, including the index patient who was presumably infected prior to the trip. There was no direct contact between the original patient and her teammates after her symptoms began; before her overt symptoms began she left her room and moved in with a chaperone. The girl subsequently began vomiting and having diarrhea in the chaperone's bathroom. The outbreak affecting the rest of the team began several days later; they were exposed by handling a bag of snacks that unfortunately had been stored in the hotel bathroom. Virus aerosolized within the bathroom likely settled onto the grocery bag and its contents. Matching viruses were found on the reusable shopping bag two weeks later.

    The investigation confirmed the great potential for contamination of surfaces in norovirus outbreaks on cruise ships, in nursing homes, and in other group settings.

    "While we certainly recommend not storing food in bathrooms," the authors note, "it is more important to emphasize that areas where aerosol exposures may have occurred should be thoroughly disinfected; this includes not only exposed surfaces, but also objects in the environment" that could become contaminated and spread infection. The authors point to some of the practices that can be put in place to limit outbreaks caused by such indirect contact, including disinfection of affected areas and the use of multiple bathrooms with one dedicated for use by those who are sick.

    In an accompanying editorial, Aron J. Hall, DVM, MSPH, of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, notes that noroviruses "are perhaps the perfect human pathogens," causing an estimated 21 million cases of acute gastroenteritis annually in the U.S. alone. The investigation of this outbreak, as reported by the study authors, "provides a fascinating example of how a unique exposure and transmission scenario can result in a norovirus outbreak."

    "That certainly is an area of active research, involving the dynamics of vomiting, and how are particles dispersed when somebody vomits. There is a limited range, for sure, but exactly how far it is and what the level of risk is 10 feet away or 30 feet away. Certainly, in this case, it was plenty close to allow the virus to float over onto the bag," says Aron J. Hall, DVM, MSPH, of the CDC's division of viral diseases.

    Some info:

    1. Norovirus can spread infection through contact with surfaces and objects contaminated by aerosolized particles.
    2. Noroviruses are highly contagious, even in low concentration, and the viruses spread efficiently from feces and vomit by direct and indirect contact.
    3. Noroviruses are the leading cause of endemic diarrheal disease across all age groups, the leading cause of foodborne disease, and the cause of half of all gastroenteritis outbreaks worldwide.
    4. Whenever possible, ill persons should use a separate bathroom to reduce the potential for spread of the virus. Notify family members or cleaning staff about the need for thorough disinfection of surfaces.

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