Be. Mahon et al., Consequences in Georgia of a nationwide outbreak of Salmonella infections:What you don't know might hurt you, AM J PUB HE, 89(1), 1999, pp. 31-35
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science","Envirnomentale Medicine & Public Health","Medical Research General Topics
Objectives. This study assessed the Impact in Georgia of a nationwide salmo
nellosis outbreak caused by ice cream products and the effectiveness of the
subsequent warning against eating the implicated products.
Methods. A telephone survey of 250 randomly selected Georgia customers of t
he ice cream producer was conducted 13 to 17 days after the warning.
Results. Respondents from 179 households representing 628 persons were inte
rviewed. The median date of first hearing the warning was 5 days after it w
as issued, and 16 respondents (9%) had not heard it. Among those who had he
ard the warning, 42 (26%) did not initially believe the products were unsaf
e. Tn 22 (31%) of the 72 households that had the implicated ice cream when
the respondent heard the warning, someone subsequently ate the ice cream. D
iarrhea was reported in 26% (121/463) of persons who had eaten the products
but in only 5% (8/152) who had not (odds ratio [controlling for household
clustering]= 3.8; 95% confidence interval = 2.0, 7.5). We estimate this out
break caused 11 000 cases of diarrhea in Georgia, 1760 (16%) with exposure
after the warning.
Conclusions. A large outbreak occurred in Georgia, much of which might have
been prevented by a more timely and convincing warning.