Restaurant-associated outbreak of Salmonella Typhi in Nauru: An epidemiological and cost analysis

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Abstract

Typhoid fever is endemic in the South Pacific. We investigated an outbreak in Nauru. Through interviews and medical records, we identified 50 persons with onset between 1 October 1998 and 10 May 1999, of fever lasting ≥ 3 days and one other symptom. Salmonella Typhi was isolated from 19 (38%) cases. Thirty-two (64%) patients were school-aged children, and 17 (34%) were in four households. Case-control studies of (a) culture-confirmed cases and age-and neighbourhood-matched controls; and (b) household index cases and randomly selected age-matched controls implicated two restaurants: Restaurant M (matched OR [MOR] = 11, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.3-96) and Restaurant 1 (MOR = 5.8, 95% CI = 1.2-29). Food-handlers at both restaurants had elevated anti-Vi antibody titres indicative of carrier state. The annual incidence was 5.0/1000 persons. Outbreak-associated costs were $46000. Routine or emergency immunization campaigns targeting school-aged children may help prevent or control outbreaks of typhoid fever in endemic disease areas.

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Olsen, S. J., Kafoa, B., Win, N. S. S., Jose, M., Bibb, W., Luby, S., … Mintz, E. (2001). Restaurant-associated outbreak of Salmonella Typhi in Nauru: An epidemiological and cost analysis. Epidemiology and Infection, 127(3), 405–412. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0950268801006033

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