Between February and May 2009, 347 laboratory-confirmed cases of acute Q fever were reported in a southern municipal health service region in The Netherlands. Commercial dairy-goat farms were implicated and control measures were initially targeted there. A preliminary investigation also implicated a non-dairy sheep farm, open to the public on 'lamb-viewing days'. This study tested the association between visiting the non-dairy sheep farm and developing Q fever in residents of the region between February and May 2009. A case-control study of 146 cases and 431 address-matched controls was conducted. Multivariable logistic regression analysis confirmed the association between visiting to the sheep farm and Q fever disease (matched odds ratio 43, 95% confidence interval 9-200). Other risk factors were being a smoker, having a past medical history and being aged >40 years. Vaccination of sheep and goats on farms open to the public should help to reduce the number of future human cases. © Copyright Cambridge University Press 2011.
CITATION STYLE
Whelan, J., Schimmer, B., De Bruin, A., Van Beest Holle, M. R. D. R., Van Der Hoek, W., & Ter Schegget, R. (2012). Visits on “lamb-viewing days” at a sheep farm open to the public was a risk factor for Q fever in 2009. Epidemiology and Infection, 140(5), 858–864. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268811001427
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