An outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni infection among conference delegates
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33321/cdi.2003.27.65Keywords:
disease outbreak, campylobacteriosis, Campylobacter jejuniAbstract
Campylobacter infection is one of the most commonly reported foodborne diseases in Australia however, reported Campylobacter outbreaks are rare. This report describes such an outbreak among delegates attending a 10 day international academic meeting in South Australia during May 2001. A retrospective cohort study of the 29 delegates who attended the conference was conducted. A questionnaire was sent by email with a response rate of 93 per cent. Ten cases (onset of diarrhoea while attending the conference) were identified. Two were culture positive for Campylobacter jejuni. There was a significant association between the illness and eating a number of food items from two restaurants however, environmental investigation of the two venues did not identify a definitive source for the outbreak. This investigation demonstrates the usefulness of email in the distribution of questionnaires among specific cohorts. Commun Dis Intell 2003;27:380-383.
Downloads
References
Pebody RG, Ryan MJ, Wall PG. Outbreaks of Campylobacter infection: rare events for a common pathogen. Commun Dis Rep CDR Rev 1997;7:R33-R37.
Kirk M, Waddell R, Dalton C, Creaser A, Rose N. A prolonged outbreak of Campylobacter infection at a training facility. Commun Dis Intell 1997;21:57-61.
Crerar SK, Dalton CB, Longbottom HM, Kraa E. Foodborne disease: current trends and future surveillance needs in Australia. Med J Aust 1996;165:672-675.
Frost JA, Gillespie IA, O'Brien SJ. Public health implications of Campylobacter outbreaks in England and Wales, 1995-99: epidemiological and microbiological investigations. Epidemiol Infect 2002,128:111-118.
Maurer AM, Sturchler D. A waterborne outbreak of small round structured virus, Campylobacter and Shigella co-infections in La Neuveville, Switzerland, 1998. Epidemiol Infect 2000;125:325-332.
Merritt A, Miles R, Bates J. An outbreak of Campylobacter enteritis on an island resort, north Queensland. Commun Dis Intell 1999;23:215-219.
Miettinen IT, Zacheus O, von Bonsdorff CH, Vartiainen T. Waterborne epidemics in Finland in 1998-1999. Water Sci Technol 2001;43:67-71.
Evans MR, Roberts RJ, Ribeiro CD, Gardner D, Kembrey D. A milk-borne Campylobacter outbreak following an educational farm visit. Epidemiol Infect 1996;117:457-462.
Kalman M, Szollosi E, Czermann B, Zimanyi M, Szekeres S. Milkborne Campylobacter infection in Hungary. J Food Prot 2000;63:1426-1429.
Pearson AD, Greenwood MH, Donaldson J, Healing TD, Jones DM, Shahmat M, et al. Continuous source outbreak of campylobacteriosis traced to chicken. J Food Prot 2000;63:309-314.
Evans MR, Lane W, Frost JA, Nylen G. A Campylobacter outbreak associated with stir-fried food. Epidemiol Infect 1998;121:275-279.
Communicable Disease Control Branch, Department of Human Services, South Australia. Unpublished data. 2001.
Studahl A, Andersson Y. Risk factors for indigenous Campylobacter infections: a Swedish case-control study. Epidemiol Infect 2000;125:269-275.
Gent RN, Telford DR, Syed Q. An outbreak of Campylobacter food poisoning at a university campus. Commun Dis Public Health 1999;2:39-42.
Roels TH, Wickus B, Bostrom HH, Kazmierczak JJ, Nicholson MA, Kurzynski TA, et al. A foodborne outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni (O:33) infection associated with a tuna salad: a rare strain in an unusual vehicle. Epidemiol Infect 1998;121:281-287.
Olsen SJ, Hansen GR, Bartlett L, Fitzgerald C, Sonder A, Manjrekar R, et al. An outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni infections associated with food handler contamination: the use of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. J Infect Dis 2001;183:164-167.
Stenzel DJ, Boreham PF. Blastocystis hominis revisited. Clin Microbiol Rev 1996;9:563-584.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
Categories
License
Copyright (c) 2003 Communicable Diseases Intelligence

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
