In a community hepatitis A outbreak in the Rochester, New York area, 64 of 79 (81%) people with anti-hepatitis A IgM-antibodies and onset of symptoms from 9 April-31 May 1994, recalled eating food obtained from a retail buyer's club. Eleven (65%) of 17 households with cases contained club members compared with 7 (21%) of 34 neighbourhood-matched control-households (matched odds ratio 8.5; 95% CI 1.7-41.6). Club employees who ate sugar-glazed baked goods were at fourfold increased risk for hepatitis. The source of infection was an IgM-positive baker who contaminated baked goods while applying sugar glaze. Computer-generated purchase lists implicated 11-12 March and 21-24 March as the most likely dates when contamination occurred. This investigation demonstrates the importance of food workers adhering to established hygiene practices. Computer-generated commercial datasets can be useful in epidemiologic investigations.
CITATION STYLE
Weltman, A. C., Bennett, N. M., Ackman, D. A., Misage, J. H., Campana, J. J., Fine, L. S., … Birkhead, G. S. (1996). An outbreak of hepatitis A associated with a bakery, New York, 1994: The 1968 “West Branch, Michigan” outbreak repeated. Epidemiology and Infection, 117(2), 333–341. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0950268800001515
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