학술논문

The Pandemic of Salmonella Enteritidis Phage Type 4 Reaches Utah: A Complex Investigation Confirms the Need for Continuing Rigorous Control Measures
Document Type
research-article
Source
Epidemiology and Infection, 2000 Aug 01. 125(1), 1-8.
Subject
Infections
Restaurants
Collective farms
Salmonella enteritidis
Case control studies
Diseases
Epidemiology
Predisposing factors
Disease outbreaks
Foodborne illnesses
Language
English
ISSN
09502688
14694409
Abstract
In 1995, Salmonella Enteritidis (SE) cases in the state of Utah increased fivefold. Isolates were identified as phage type 4 (PT4). Risk factors and sources of infection were investigated in two case-control studies, a traceback of implicated foods, and environmental testing. Forty-three patients with sporadic infections and 86 controls were included in a case-control study of risk factors for infection. A follow-up case-control study of 25 case and 19 control restaurants patronized by case and control patients examined risks associated with restaurant practices. In the first case-control study, restaurant dining was associated with illness (P = 0·002). In the follow-up case-control study, case restaurants were likelier to use > 2000 eggs per week (P < 0·02), to pool eggs (P < 0·05), and to use eggs from cooperative 'A' (P < 0·009). Eggs implicated in separately investigated SE PT4 outbreaks were traced to cooperative 'A', and SE PT4 was cultured from one of the cooperative's five local farms. We conclude that SE PT4 transmitted by infected eggs from a single farm caused a fivefold increase in human infections in Utah.