Jones Timothy F, Imhoff Beth, Samuel Michael, Mshar Patricia, McCombs Katherine Gibbs, Hawkins Marguerite, Deneen Valerie, Cambridge Michael, Olsen Sonja J
Communicable and Environmental Disease Services, Tennessee Department of Health, Nashville, TN 37247, USA.
Clin Infect Dis. 2004 Apr 15;38 Suppl 3:S297-302. doi: 10.1086/381599.
To better understand factors associated with confirming the etiologic organism and identifying the food vehicle responsible for foodborne-disease outbreaks, we examined data from outbreaks reported in 1998 and 1999 through active surveillance by Foodborne Disease Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet) surveillance areas in 7 states. In 71% of these outbreaks, no confirmed etiology was identified, and in 46%, no suspected food vehicle was identified. Outbreaks involving > or =10 cases were significantly more likely to have their etiology identified than were smaller outbreaks. In two-thirds of outbreaks in which an etiology was not confirmed, no stool specimens were collected for laboratory testing; in 55% of these outbreaks, neither clinical specimens nor food samples were tested. If the etiology of and factors contributing to foodborne-disease outbreaks are to be understood, adequate resources must be available to allow specimens to be collected and tested and epidemiologic investigations to be conducted appropriately.
为了更好地了解与确认病原体以及确定食源性疾病暴发的食物载体相关的因素,我们研究了1998年和1999年通过食源性疾病主动监测网络(FoodNet)在7个州的监测区域进行主动监测报告的暴发数据。在这些暴发中,71%未确定确诊病因,46%未确定可疑食物载体。涉及≥10例病例的暴发比小规模暴发更有可能确定其病因。在三分之二未确诊病因的暴发中,未采集粪便标本进行实验室检测;在这些暴发中,55%既未检测临床标本也未检测食物样本。如果要了解食源性疾病暴发的病因和促成因素,必须有足够的资源来采集和检测标本,并适当地开展流行病学调查。