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1.
N Engl J Med ; 298(2): 76-9, 1978 Jan 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-579433

ABSTRACT

In September and October, 1976, an outbreak of illness due to chocolate milk contaminated with Yersinia enterocolitica resulted in hospitalization of 36 children, 16 of whom had appendectomies. Infection with Y. enterocolitica serotype 0:8 was demonstrated in 38 ill persons. Sixty-one per cent of the persons who were infected had a titer greater than 1:160 OH agglutinins to serotype 8 yersinia, whereas 48 per cent of the hospitalized children had a fourfold change in agglutinin titer. An epidemiologic investigation demonstrated that illness was associated with drinking of chocolate milk purchased in school cafeterias, and Y. enterocolitica 0:8 was subsequently isolated from the milk. The investigation suggested that the bacterium was introduced at the dairy during the mixing by hand of chocolate syrup with previously pasteurized milk.


Subject(s)
Cacao , Disease Outbreaks , Food Contamination , Milk/microbiology , Yersinia Infections/etiology , Adolescent , Agglutinins/analysis , Animals , Antibodies, Bacterial/analysis , Child , Food Handling , Humans , New York , Yersinia/isolation & purification , Yersinia Infections/transmission
2.
Ann Intern Med ; 87(4): 426-32, 1977 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-907241

ABSTRACT

Three hundred fifty residents of Rome, New York, had laboratory-confirmed cases of giardiasis between 1 November 1974 and 7 June 1975. A random household survey showed an overall attack rate for giardiasis (defined as a diarrheal illness of 5 days or more) of 10.6%. A significant association was discovered between having giardiasis and using city water and between having illness and drinking 1 or more glasses of water a day. The presence of human settlements in the Rome watershed area suggested that the water supply could have been contaminated by untreated human waste. The infectivity of municipal water was confirmed by producing giardiasis in specific pathogen-free dogs fed sediment samples of raw water obtained from an inlet of a city reservoir. A microscopic examination of the water sediments uncovered a Giardia lamblia cyst in one sample. This was the first time that a G. lamblia cyst has been found in municipal water in an epidemic and the first time that such water has been shown to infect laboratory animals.


Subject(s)
Disease Outbreaks , Giardiasis/transmission , Water Supply , Animals , Dogs , Giardiasis/parasitology , Humans , New York , Urban Population , Water Microbiology
3.
N Engl J Med ; 291(23): 1259, 1974 Dec 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4419977
4.
N Engl J Med ; 290(24): 1384, 1974 Jun 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4827660

Subject(s)
Physicians , Politics
5.
7.
Am J Public Health ; 61(9): 1748-9, 1971 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-5565439
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