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Tag: norovirus

  • ‘Winter Vomiting Disease’ Cases Surging – KXL

    ATLANTA, GA – Cases of the “winter vomiting disease” are surging across the U.S.  The Centers for Disease Control’s wastewater surveillance testing has indicated the norovirus is spreading earlier and faster than usual.

    Each year there are about 2,500 reported outbreaks of the virus in the U.S., and this year cases have been on the rise particularly in Louisiana, Michigan and Indiana.

    Health experts have encouraged vigilance through proper hand washing, frequently disinfecting surfaces and avoiding direct contact with those infected.

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    Tim Lantz

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  • How long can a Thanksgiving buffet sit out? A doctor explains

    (CNN) — Nearly 82 million Americans are expected to travel over the Thanksgiving holiday, including many of you.

    As family and friends gather together to share meals, it may be good to remember that foodborne illnesses are on the rise. These are mostly preventable with the right precautions.

    I want to make sure that the food my family and I are preparing is safe—and so are the leftovers, so I turned to CNN wellness expert Dr. Leana Wen. Wen is an emergency physician and clinical associate professor at George Washington University. She previously served as Baltimore’s health commissioner, where her responsibilities included overseeing food safety.

    CNN: What causes foodborne infections?

    Dr. Leana Wen: Foodborne infections are caused by pathogens, like bacteria, viruses and parasites. In the US, the most common form of foodborne infection is norovirus, which is a contagious virus that spreads from person to person through sharing utensils or touching objects that an infected person has touched and then touching your mouth. There are also several bacteria that cause foodborne illness, including salmonella, E. coli, Campylobacter and listeria.

    CNN: What symptoms do people experience?

    Wen: Typical symptoms of foodborne illness include abdominal cramping, nausea, diarrhea and vomiting. Many people recover within 24 hours, but some can become very ill, depending on the pathogen and their underlying medical conditions. Those at highest risk for complications are young children, pregnant women, older individuals and people with immunocompromising medical illnesses.

    CNN: I’ve seen a lot of recalls for food products. How do I make sure that the food I’m preparing is OK before placing it out at meals?

    Wen: Rhere have been several instances of high-profile food recalls, but it’s important to remember that the majority of foodborne illnesses occur in everyday settings that don’t involve high-profile cases. Definitely be aware of food recalls (the US government maintains a comprehensive list of recent recalls) and make sure that you don’t have products in your fridge or pantry that are deemed unsafe. But don’t obsess over it, as chances are that the food you buy will be safe. However, there are many other things that you can and need to do make sure you abide by safe food preparing practices.

    CNN: Let’s talk about some of these best practices. How do I defrost my turkey safely?

    Wen: This is a great question and applies not only to turkey but also to other poultry and meat. The concern is to keep bacteria from growing when the turkey thaws.

    There are three ways to safely thaw turkey. The easiest, though the one that takes the longest, is to thaw in the refrigerator. You put the turkey in a container to prevent it from dripping onto other food. It generally takes 24 hours for each four to five pounds of turkey, so an 8-pound turkey could take two days, and a 12-pound turkey could take three days.

    The second way is to wrap the turkey in a leak-proof bag and submerge it in cold water. This takes about 30 minutes per pound, so the 8-pound turkey will take about 4 hours to thaw. You could use tap water and change the water every 30 minutes. It’s important to cook the turkey immediately after it is thawed to prevent bacteria growth.

    The third way is to use a microwave. How long it will take depends on the specific microwave. This is the fastest method, but because some parts of the turkey will start to cook during microwaving, it’s essential to cook the turkey right after thawing.

    It’s not a good idea to leave the turkey thawing on the counter in a warm room. That’s because parts of the turkey may still be frozen while some parts reach high enough temperature for the bacteria to rapidly multiply.

    CNN: How long can a Thanksgiving buffet sit out? Does it vary by dish?

    Wen: The rule of thumb to keep in mind is the “two-hour rule.” Once the food is cooked, it should not be left at room temperature for more than two hours. In the summer, if this is an outdoor picnic and the temperature is over 90 degrees Fahrenheit, food should be refrigerated after an hour.

    This rule applies to all perishable foods, including meat, fish and milk products. Cooked leftovers should be refrigerated. The foods that do not need to be refrigerated according to the two-hour rule are baked goods such as cookies and cakes, dried meat such as jerky, whole fruit that is not chopped, and nuts.

    CNN: What if the food is on a burner or in a slow cooker to keep it warm?

    Wen: The temperature at which bacteria multiples rapidly is between 40 degrees Fahrenheit and 140 degrees Fahrenheit. If the food is being kept warm by an appliance such that is over 140 degrees Fahrenheit — or if it’s being kept cooled at below 40 degrees Fahrenheit — this does not count toward the two-hour rule. But within two hours of removing from the warming or cooling apparatus, it needs to be refrigerated.

    CNN: The fridge is my friend, right? Can food go into the fridge so we can enjoy leftovers the next day?

    Wen: Yes, if it is stored in a timely manner in the refrigerator. Leftovers can typically be kept in the fridge for three to four days. They can also be frozen for three to four months.

    CNN: What other safety tips people should keep in mind before gatherings?

    Wen: We’ve talked about thawing and storage of leftovers, and we also need to discuss cooking or reheating to the right temperature. The temperature varies depending on the type of meat or fish. An internal meat thermometer is crucial for monitoring the temperature. Make sure that fish is cooked to 145 degrees Fahrenheit and chicken, turkey and poultry to 165 degrees Fahrenheit.

    Be aware of cross-contamination. Do not use containers or utensils you have used with raw meat or fish to touch other products, like vegetables and fruits.

    Also, remember that norovirus is the most common cause of foodborne illness. People who have nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach cramps or other symptoms of norovirus should not prepare food. Everyone should wash their hands often and well with soap and water.

    Event hosts should also ask that those who are experiencing signs of respiratory infection to stay home. And those who are especially vulnerable to severe illness due to underlying conditions should take additional precautions that are appropriate for their individual circumstance.

    Katia Hetter and CNN

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  • Royal Caribbean ship with Norovirus outbreak stopped in Miami; 98 were ill

    Royal Caribbean’s Serenade of the Seas at Port Everglades in 2017.

    Royal Caribbean’s Serenade of the Seas at Port Everglades in 2017.

    TNS File

    The Royal Caribbean cruise ship facing a norovirus outbreak while at sea docked at PortMiami early Thursday morning, concluding a 13-night voyage.

    Royal Caribbean reported the health concern to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Vessel Sanitation Program on Sept. 28. By the time the ship arrived in Miami, federal health agency says 94 passengers onboard Serenade of the Seas reported falling ill. That’s about 5 percent of the 1,874 total passengers onboard. Four crew members out of 883 (0.5 percent) became sick, according to the CDC’s updated Sept. 30 report.

    An outbreak is when 3 percent or more of a cruise ship’s passengers or crew have specific gastrointestinal symptoms. Cruise lines are required to report that.

    Passengers who’d fallen ill on the Serenade of the Seas were isolated, disembarking separately upon arrival. A few passengers who didn’t fall ill did criticize the carrier for poor communication with guests and minimal transparency.

    Otherwise, the return to land was relatively uneventful, according to multiple sources with direct knowledge.

    No emergency services were reported to have been used to transport the ill on Thursday. Miami Fire Rescue and Miami-Dade Fire Rescue said they did not respond to any calls at the PortMiami for Royal Caribbean on Thursday. That indicates passengers who’d caught the virus were able to exit the vessel on their own.

    “All passengers from Serenade of the Seas disembarked by 10:13 a.m.,” Suzy Trutie, communications director at the PortMiami, told the Herald in a brief interview. That was “on par” for similar-sized ships, she said.

    By 4 p.m., Serenade of the Seas had already departed Miami, headed for Colon, Panama. It’ll arrive there on Oct. 5.

    The ill passengers mainly experienced diarrhea and vomiting, the CDC said. The cause was classified as norovirus, a contagious virus that causes nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, and is commonly known as the stomach flu.

    Serenade of the Seas left San Diego on Sept. 19 for PortMiami, the planned end of the voyage. From Oct. 11 to the end of the winter season, the vessel is scheduled to home port from Cartagena, Colombia, or Colon, Panama, according to CruiseMapper.

    At PortMiami on Thursday, several travelers express frustration over how the outbreak was managed by the cruise line.

    Denise Carlton had her luggage inadvertently put in the quarantined group for disembarking causing a several-hour delay that made her and traveling companion Linda Creek, 78, miss their flight back to Tennessee. Neither contracted the norovirus nor had any symptoms.

    Creek, who lives in Jasper, Tenn., was also unhappy with Royal Caribbean’s lack of communication with guests aboard the vessel during the outbreak. She and Carlton said they recieved one email asking them if they were unwell and saying if so, to report to the ship’s infirmary.

    But it didn’t inform them that other guests had fallen sick, said Carlton, 55 from Chattanooga, Tenn. Creek said she was getting better information from phone calls with her daughter, who wasn’t on the cruise. By noon Thursday they were still standing outside the terminal trying to figure out their next steps.

    Meanwhile, in the Sept. 30 report, the CDC said that its Vessel Sanitation Program was “remotely monitoring the situation, including review of the ship’s outbreak response and sanitation procedures.”

    It noted that in response to the outbreak, Royal Caribbean told them it increased cleaning and disinfection procedures according to their outbreak prevention and response plan, collected stool specimens from gastrointestinal illness cases for testing and isolated ill passengers and crew.

    The 98 cases reported are for the entire voyage. That does not mean all of them were sick at the same time.

    Vinod Sreeharsha

    Miami Herald

    Vinod Sreeharsha covers tourism trends in South Florida for the Miami Herald.

    Vinod Sreeharsha

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  • You Can Be A Chipotle Bag For Halloween This Year If You’re Perpetually Stuck In 2022

    You Can Be A Chipotle Bag For Halloween This Year If You’re Perpetually Stuck In 2022

    This Halloween, Chipotle wants to spice things up and do more than just feed customers; it wants to dress them, too.

    The burrito maker has joined forces with Spirit Halloween, North America’s largest Halloween retailer, to launch its first-ever costume collection, it said in statement on Wednesday. The publicity stunt takes inspiration from the viral costume memes that both brands have tapped into in recent years.

    Starting on September 6, customers can snag a costume that pays tribute to some of Chipotle’s iconic (and less-than-iconic) items, including: napkin, fork, water cup, burrito, and to-go bag. Each unitard is priced at $40 and will be available in sizes from adult small to XL.

    The unitards, or full-body suits, will be up for grabs on Spirit Halloween’s website and at select locations across the U.S., including Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, New York, and Egg Harbor Township, New Jersey. Customers in Canada can buy a costume online, while supplies last.

    Through the collaboration, the companies are trying to monetize the somewhat-dated quirky costume memes inspired by Spirit Halloween’s bags. Two years ago, Chipotle jumped on the bandwagon with a fictional “Chipotle Fork” and a “Chipotle Napkin” unitard, which collectively garnered over 700,000 engagements online, the company said.

    But that’s not all – Chipotle says it is brewing up another “scarily great offer” for customers next month, with those details still under wraps. The company once gave away free food to customers who dressed in tin foil — like a burrito — on October 31, however the company has since watered down that promotion into a partial discount.

    Let’s take a look at the five unitards Chipotle is offering this Halloween:

    Francisco Velasquez

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  • Moderna is developing a Lyme disease vaccine in a first for the company

    Moderna is developing a Lyme disease vaccine in a first for the company

    Moderna Inc. said Tuesday it’s working to develop its first bacterial vaccine to protect against Lyme disease, the tick-borne illness that causes a range of painful symptoms, including fever, headaches, fatigue, joint pain and rash.

    The biotech
    MRNA,
    -2.75%
    ,
    whose first product to be approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration was its mRNA-based COVID vaccine, said it has two candidates in development to address Lyme disease, named mRNA-1982 and mRNA-1975.

    It announced the news at its fourth Vaccine Day, where it offered a full update on its clinical pipeline, which includes vaccines to protect against flu and respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, as well as HIV, Epstein-Barr virus and herpes simplex virus, among others.

    There are about 120,000 cases of Lyme disease in the U.S. and Europe every year, creating a “significant quality of life burden,” the company said in a statement. Rising temperatures are helping the disease spread more easily, and it is difficult to diagnose, because the symptoms are similar to those of many other diseases. It most seriously affects children below the age of 15 and older adults.

    “Older adults appear to have higher odds of unfavorable treatment response as compared with younger patients, and neurologic manifestations are more common at presentation for this older adult population,” said the statement.

    Tick and Lyme disease season is here, and scientists warn this year could be worse than ever. Dr. Goudarz Molaei joins Lunch Break’s Tanya Rivero to explain what triggered the rapid spread of the disease and how people can avoid being affected. Photo: Kent Wood/Science Source

    The mRNA-1982 candidate is designed to create antibodies for Borrelia burgdorferi, the pathogen that causes almost all Lyme disease in the U.S., while mRNA-1975 is designed to elicit antibodies specific to the four major Borrelia species that cause the disease in the U.S. and Europe.

    Other new candidates in Moderna’s pipeline include mRNA-1405 and mRNA-1403, which aim to address the enteric virus norovirus. Norovirus is highly contagious and is the leading cause of diarrheal disease globally, Moderna said. It’s associated with about 18% of all such illnesses worldwide and causes about 200,000 deaths every year.

    Overall, Moderna is expecting to launch six major vaccine products in the next few years, all of them with large addressable markets.

    The company expects the annual global endemic market for COVID boosters alone to be worth about $15 billion.

    It has dosed the first participant in a late-stage trial of its next-generation, refrigerator-stable COVID-19 vaccine candidate, mRNA-1283. The vaccine “has demonstrated encouraging results in multiple clinical studies,” the company said.

    See now: Moderna CEO defends price increase for COVID vaccine to Congress

    A separate trial of a flu vaccine called mRNA-1010 fared less well, however.

    That trial “did not accrue sufficient cases at the interim efficacy analysis to declare early success in the Phase 3 Northern Hemisphere efficacy trial and the independent DSMB recommended continuation of efficacy follow-up,” the company said.

    The company expects the market for respiratory-product sales to range from $8 billion to $15 billion by 2027 and for operating profit that year to range from $4 billion to $9 billion.

    The stock was down 4% Tuesday and has fallen 15% in the year to date, while the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.17%

    has gained 7%.

    See also: Moderna’s stock slides as earnings fall short of estimates amid steep decline in COVID-vaccine sales

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  • Norovirus Is Almost Impossible to Stop

    Norovirus Is Almost Impossible to Stop

    In one very specific and mostly benign way, it’s starting to feel a lot like the spring of 2020: Disinfection is back.

    “Bleach is my friend right now,” says Annette Cameron, a pediatrician at Yale School of Medicine, who spent the first half of this week spraying and sloshing the potent chemical all over her home. It’s one of the few tools she has to combat norovirus, the nasty gut pathogen that her 15-year-old son was recently shedding in gobs.

    Right now, hordes of people in the Northern Hemisphere are in a similarly crummy situation. In recent weeks, norovirus has seeded outbreaks in several countries, including the United Kingdom, Canada, and the United States. Last week, the U.K. Health Security Agency announced that laboratory reports of the virus had risen to levels 66 percent higher than what’s typical this time of year. Especially hard-hit are Brits 65 and older, who are falling ill at rates that “haven’t been seen in over a decade.”

    Americans could be heading into a rough stretch themselves, Caitlin Rivers, an infectious-disease epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University, told me, given how closely the U.S.’s epidemiological patterns tend to follow those of the U.K. “It does seem like there’s a burst of activity right now,” says Nihal Altan-Bonnet, a norovirus researcher at the National Institutes of Health. At her own practice, Cameron has been seeing the number of vomiting and diarrhea cases among her patients steadily tick up. (Other pathogens can cause gastrointestinal symptoms as well, but norovirus is the most common cause of foodborne illness in the United States.)

    To be clear, this is more a nauseating nuisance than a public-health crisis. In most people, norovirus triggers, at most, a few miserable days of GI distress that can include vomiting, diarrhea, and fevers, then resolves on its own; the keys are to stay hydrated and avoid spreading it to anyone vulnerable—little kids, older adults, the immunocompromised. The U.S. logs fewer than 1,000 annual deaths out of millions of documented cases. In other high-income countries, too, severe outcomes are very rare, though the virus is far more deadly in parts of the world with limited access to sanitation and potable water.

    Still, fighting norovirus isn’t easy, as plenty of parents can attest. The pathogen, which prompts the body to expel infectious material from both ends of the digestive tract, is seriously gross and frustratingly hardy. Even the old COVID standby, a spritz of hand sanitizer, doesn’t work against it—the virus is encased in a tough protein shell that makes it insensitive to alcohol. Some have estimated that ingesting as few as 18 infectious units of virus can be enough to sicken someone, “and normally, what’s getting shed is in the billions,” says Megan Baldridge, a virologist and immunologist at Washington University in St. Louis. At an extreme, a single gram of feces—roughly the heft of a jelly bean—could contain as many as 5.5 billion infectious doses, enough to send the entire population of Eurasia sprinting for the toilet.

    Unlike flu and RSV, two other pathogens that have bounced back to prominence in recent months, norovirus mainly targets the gut, and spreads especially well when people swallow viral particles that have been released in someone else’s vomit or stool. (Despite its “stomach flu” nickname, norovirus is not a flu virus.) But direct contact with those substances, or the food or water they contaminate, may not even be necessary: Sometimes people vomit with such force that the virus gets aerosolized; toilets, especially lidless ones, can send out plumes of infection like an Air Wick from hell. And Altan-Bonnet’s team has found that saliva may be an unappreciated reservoir for norovirus, at least in laboratory animals. If the spittle finding holds for humans, then talking, singing, and laughing in close proximity could be risky too.

    Once emitted into the environment, norovirus particles can persist on surfaces for days—making frequent hand-washing and surface disinfection key measures to prevent spread, says Ibukun Kalu, a pediatric infectious-disease specialist at Duke University. Handshakes and shared meals tend to get dicey during outbreaks, along with frequently touched items such as utensils, door handles, and phones. One 2012 study pointed to a woven plastic grocery bag as the source of a small outbreak among a group of teenage soccer players; the bag had just been sitting in a bathroom used by one of the girls when she fell sick the night before.

    Once a norovirus transmission chain begins, it can be very difficult to break. The virus can spread before symptoms start, and then for more than a week after they resolve. To make matters worse, immunity to the virus tends to be short-lived, lasting just a few months even against a genetically identical strain, Baldridge told me.

    Day cares, cruise ships, schools, restaurants, military training camps, prisons, and long-term-care facilities can be common venues for norovirus spread. “I did research with the Navy, and it just goes through like wildfire,” often sickening more than half the people on tightly packed ships, says Robert Frenck, the director of the Vaccine Research Center at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital. Households, too, are highly susceptible to spread: Once the virus arrives, the entire family is almost sure to be infected. Baldridge, who has two young children, told me that her household has weathered at least four bouts of norovirus in the past several years.

    (A pause for some irony: In spite of norovirus’s infectiousness, scientists did not succeed in culturing it in labs until just a few years ago, after nearly half a century of research. When researchers design challenge trials to, say, test new vaccines, they still need to dose volunteers with norovirus that’s been extracted from patient stool, a gnarly practice that’s been around for more than 50 years.)

    Norovirus spread doesn’t have to be a foregone conclusion. Some people do get lucky: Roughly 20 percent of European populations, for instance, are genetically resistant to common norovirus strains. “So you can hope,” Frenck told me. For the rest of us, it comes down to hygiene. Altan-Bonnet recommends diligent hand-washing, plus masking to ward off droplet-borne virus. Sick people should isolate themselves if they can. “And keep your saliva to yourself,” she told me.

    Rivers and Cameron have both managed to halt the virus in their homes in the past; Cameron may have pulled it off again this week. The family fastidiously scrubbed their hands with hot water and soap, donned disposable gloves when touching shared surfaces, and took advantage of the virus’s susceptibility to harsh chemicals and heat. When her son threw up on the floor, Cameron sprayed it down with bleach; when he vomited on his quilt, she blasted it twice in the washing machine on the sanitizing setting, then put it through the dryer at a super high temp. Now a couple of days out from the end of their son’s sickness, Cameron and her husband appear to have escaped unscathed.

    Norovirus isn’t new, and this won’t be the last time it hits. In a lot of ways, “this is back to basics,” says Samina Bhumbra, the medical director of infection prevention at Riley Children’s Hospital. After three years of COVID, the world has gotten used to thinking about infections in terms of airways. “We need to recalibrate,” Bhumbra told me, “and remember that other things exist.”

    Katherine J. Wu

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  • Norovirus Cases Are on the Upswing, CDC Says

    Norovirus Cases Are on the Upswing, CDC Says

    Feb. 10, 2023 — The number of positive cases of the norovirus, a highly transmissible gastrointestinal illness also known as the stomach flu, is rising across the United States.

    There were 225 norovirus outbreaks reported to the CDC between Aug. 1, 2022, and Jan. 8, 2023, compared to 172 outbreaks during the same period the previous season, according to CDC data. 

    The highest rate of positive tests is in the Midwest. 

    “While norovirus cases are rising in the U.S., CDC data as recent as January 2023 show that reported norovirus outbreaks are within the expected range for this time of year,” CDC spokesperson Kate Grusich said, according to NBC News. 

    “Prevention measures implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic were likely effective in preventing norovirus outbreaks. As pandemic restrictions have relaxed, the number of norovirus outbreaks has returned to levels similar to pre-pandemic years.” 

    Though it’s called the stomach flu, norovirus is not related to influenza. Symptoms of norovirus include diarrhea, vomiting, nausea, stomach pain, fever, and body aches.

    There’s no treatment for norovirus, but doctors usually recommend people drink plenty of fluids.

    In England, norovirus rates are 66% higher than the average over the five seasons before the COVID pandemic, data from the UK Health Security Agency shows.The biggest rise in positive cases is in people 65 and older.

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  • Parents Encouraged to Keep Kids Home if Sick With GI Bugs

    Parents Encouraged to Keep Kids Home if Sick With GI Bugs

    Nov. 1, 2022 Attention parents: If your child is showing signs of a stomach bug, do not send them to school or day care. 

    That’s the take-home message in a new CDC report, which found that nearly 90% of outbreaks of acute gastrointestinal infections in schools and child care settings result from person-to-person contact. 

    “Clinicians should encourage parents to keep children out of school for up to 24 hours after symptoms have subsided, as viral shedding may continue after symptoms stop,” says Janine Cory, a spokesperson for the CDC. 

    She also encouraged pediatricians to reinforce good hygiene habits with parents, including making sure children stay home if they are sick and that they wash their hands with warm water and soap, as most hand sanitizers are not effective against the germs most often linked to GI outbreaks in kids. 

    The report, published in the journal Pediatrics, was based on an analysis by CDC researchers and their colleagues of more than 4,600 outbreaks of acute gastroenteritis – what many people call a “stomach flu” between 2009 and 2020. 

    Most outbreaks occurred in schools between October and March, and typically involved viral infections. Around 86% of all outbreaks in the study were linked to person-to-person contact. Roughly two-thirds of all outbreaks during the study period involved strains of norovirus or the bacteria species shigella. 

    Symptoms of norovirus infection include diarrhea, vomiting, and stomach pain, according to the CDC. Shigellosis, the infection caused by shigella, can cause bloody stool and diarrhea, high fever, severe stomach cramping and tenderness, and dehydration. 

    Schools and child care centers accounted for an average of 457 outbreaks and 15,779 cases per year during the study period. (The number of outbreaks plummeted during the COVID-19 pandemic, as kids stayed home during lockdowns, according to the researchers.)

    While outbreaks in schools were significantly larger than those in child care centers, sickness in child care centers lasted longer. Outbreaks in schools lasted 9 days, on average, while child care center outbreaks lasted for an average of 15 days. Around 98% of outbreaks were to blame for at least one visit to the emergency room, the researchers report. 

    Bacterial outbreaks may spread more in child care facilities due to the presence of diapered children, poor hand hygiene, and the younger age of the children, the researchers say.  

    Tim Joos, MD, a pediatrician and internist in Seattle, says fielding calls about norovirus infections and shigellosis is a routine part of his day – particularly during the school year.

    “The phrase ‘something going around the day care’ is heard daily in clinics and emergency rooms,” he says.  

     “As practicing clinicians, we often get caught up with not seeing the forest for the trees. We are often seeing the individual patient’s needs but not the larger trends. Thanks to this study, we now have an overview of the landscape of gastroenteritis,” Joos says. 

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