Department of Gastrointestinal and Emerging Infections, Centre for infectious Diseases Surveillance and Control, Public Health England, London, UK.
Epidemiol Infect. 2014 Mar;142(3):601-7. doi: 10.1017/S0950268813001210. Epub 2013 May 31.
Over a 12-year period, the Health Protection Agency's (now Public Health England's) Department of Gastrointestinal and Emerging Infections (GEZI) investigated over 100 potential national outbreaks of Salmonella enterica. These ranged from a cluster of cases requiring data interrogation and monitoring of the situation, to full blown case-control studies involving hundreds of interviews, many staff, multi-agency collaboration and the media. Vehicles of infection ranged from the usual suspects of chicken and eggs, to the less frequently implicated snake feed and chocolate. This has forced us to alter our preconceptions of disease transmission. The way in which GEZI investigate outbreaks and conduct case-control studies is constantly evolving as we learn and adapt to the changing aetiology of S. enterica. We present the findings and lessons learned during the last 12 years of investigating S. enterica outbreaks in England and Wales.
在过去的 12 年中,英国卫生保护局(现更名为英格兰公共卫生署)的胃肠道和新发感染部门(GEZI)调查了超过 100 起潜在的沙门氏菌全国性爆发事件。这些事件的范围从需要数据询问和监测情况的病例集群,到涉及数百次访谈、大量员工、多机构合作和媒体参与的全面病例对照研究。感染媒介从常见的鸡肉和鸡蛋,到不太常见的蛇饲料和巧克力。这迫使我们改变对疾病传播的固有观念。随着我们对 S. enterica 病因学的不断学习和适应,GEZI 调查爆发和进行病例对照研究的方式也在不断发展。我们展示了在过去 12 年中调查英格兰和威尔士沙门氏菌爆发事件期间的发现和经验教训。