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Abstract
McEvoy M, Blake W, Brown D, et al. "An outbreak of viral
gastroenteritis on a cruise ship," Communicable
Disease Report Review,
1996, 6:13 (Dec 6), R188-92.
Three hundred and seventy-eight passengers reported
gastroenteritis during four cruises in the western Mediterranean on
consecutive weeks of 1995. The rate at which cases were reported each
day increased on the fourth cruise. The ship's owner commissioned an
epidemiological investigation from the PHLS Communicable Disease
Surveillance Centre. Cases reported explosive vomiting and diarrhoea,
which lasted from 24 hours to five days, and were suggestive of viral
gastroenteritis. No food handlers reported illness, but enquiries
suggested that some had been ill and treated themselves. No bacterial
pathogens were isolated from faecal specimens provided by cases or from
water, food, and environmental samples taken from the galley. Small
round structured viruses (SRSV) were identified by reverse
transcriptase polymerase chain reaction in two faecal specimens and one
specimen of vomit from people who became ill during the fourth cruise.
SRSV was also identified in one faecal specimen by electron microscopy.
Environmental inspection revealed inappropriate food handling, hygiene,
and storage. During one 24 hour period no chlorine was detectable in
the water. A case control study conducted on the fourth cruise sought
details of exposure to various foodstuffs, unbottled water, and various
parts of the ship. No significant associations were found between
illness and any exposures. The evidence strongly suggested a continuing
outbreak of SRSV infection transmitted from person to person. Some
passengers remained on board for a second week and could have
transmitted their infection to new arrivals. The ship was cleared and
disinfected at the end of the fourth cruise in order to interrupt
transmission. Fewer than 10 cases presented in each of the fifth and
sixth cruises.
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