1 / 11

Oswego

Oswego. An Outbreak of Gastrointestinal Illness Following a Church Supper. Synopsis.

stacey
Download Presentation

Oswego

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Oswego An Outbreak of Gastrointestinal Illness Following a Church Supper

  2. Synopsis • On April 19, 1940, the local health officer in the village of Lycoming, Oswego County, New York, reported the occurrence of an outbreak of acute gastrointestinal illness to the District Health Officer in Syracuse. Dr. A.M. Rubin, epidemiologist-in-training, was assigned to conduct an investigation.

  3. When Dr. Rubin arrived in the field, he learned from the health officer that all persons known to be ill had attended a church supper held on the previous evening, April 18. Family members who did not attend the church supper did not become ill. Accordingly, Dr. Rubin focused the investigation on the super. He completed interviews with 75 of the 80 persons known to have attended, collecting information about occurrence and time of onset of symptoms, and foods consumed. Of the 75 persons interviewed, 46 persons reported gastrointestinal illness.

  4. Questions? • Would you call this an epidemic? • What steps should we follow in this investigation?

  5. The onset of illness in all cases was acute, characterized chiefly by nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. None of the ill persons reported having an elevated temperature; all recovered within 24-30 hours. Approximately 20% of the ill persons visited physicians. No fecal specimens were obtained for bacteriologic examination.

  6. Questions? • List the broad categories of diseases that must be considered in the differential diagnosis of an outbreak of gastrointestinal illness. • (example: bacteria and bacterial toxins) • In epidemiologic terminology, what is a vehicle? What is a vector? What are other modes of transmission? • If you were to administer a questionnaire to the church supper participants, what information would you collect?

  7. The supper was held in the basement of the village church. Foods were contributed by numerous members of the congregation. The supper began at 6:00 p.m. and continued until 11:00 p.m. Food was spread out on a table and consumed over a period of several hours. • Data regarding onset of illness and food eaten or water drunk by each of the 75 persons interviewed are provided in the attached line listing. The approximate time of eating supper was collected for only about half the persons who had gastrointestinal illness.

  8. Ate Food Did Not Eat Food Attack Rate Ratio or Food # Ill Total % # Ill Total % Risk Ratio Baked Ham 2 46 63.0% 17 29 58.6% 1.1 Spinach 26 43 20 32 Mashed Potatoes 23 37 23 37 Cabbage Salad 18 28 28 47 Jell-O 16 23 30 52 Rolls 21 37 25 38 Brown Bread 18 27 28 48 Milk 2 4 44 71 Coffee 19 31 27 44 Water 13 24 33 51 Cakes 27 40 19 35 Van. Ice Cream 43 54 3 21 Choc. Ice Cream 25 47 20 27 Fruit Salad 4 6 42 69

  9. Questions • What is a line listing? • Look at the attached epidemiologic curve, are there any cases for which the times of onset are inconsistent with the general experience? How might they be explained? • Using the epidemiologic curve, determine the range and median of the incubation period. • Three ill persons denied eating _______. So what happened?

More Related