Literature DB >> 21067674

A prolonged outbreak of Salmonella Montevideo infections associated with multiple locations of a restaurant chain in Phoenix, Arizona, 2008.

Minal K Patel1, Sanny Chen, Jeshua Pringle, Elizabeth Russo, Jaime Viñaras, Joli Weiss, Shoana Anderson, Rebecca Sunenshine, Kenneth Komatsu, Mare Schumacher, Daniel Flood, Lisa Theobald, Cheryl Bopp, Kathleen Wannemuehler, Patsy White, Frederick J Angulo, Casey Barton Behravesh.   

Abstract

An outbreak of Salmonella serotype Montevideo infections associated with multiple locations of restaurant chain A in Phoenix, AZ, was identified in July 2008. One infected individual reported eating at a chain A catered luncheon where others fell ill; we conducted a cohort study among attendees to identify the vehicle. Food and environmental samples collected at six chain A locations were cultured for Salmonella. Restaurant inspection results were compared among 18 chain A locations. Routine surveillance identified 58 Arizona residents infected with the outbreak strain. Three chain A locations, one of which catered the luncheon, were named by two or more case patients as a meal source in the week prior to illness onset. In the cohort study of luncheon attendees, 30 reported illness, 10 of which were later culture confirmed. Illness was reported by 30 (61%) of 49 attendees who ate chicken and by 0 of 7 who did not. The outbreak strain was isolated from two of these three locations from uncooked chicken in marinade, chopped cilantro, and a cutting board dedicated to cutting cooked chicken. Raw chicken, contaminated before arrival at the restaurant, was the apparent source of this outbreak. The three locations where two or more case patients ate had critical violations upon routine inspection, while 15 other locations received none. Poor hygiene likely led to cross-contamination of food and work areas. This outbreak supports the potential use of inspections in identifying restaurants at high risk of outbreaks and the need to reduce contamination of raw products at the source and prevent cross-contamination at the point of service.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21067674     DOI: 10.4315/0362-028x-73.10.1858

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Food Prot        ISSN: 0362-028X            Impact factor:   2.077


  4 in total

1.  Environmental Health Program Performance and its Relationship with Environment-Related Disease in Florida.

Authors:  Justin A Gerding; Nailya O DeLellis; Antonio J Neri; Timothy A Dignam
Journal:  Fla Public Health Rev       Date:  2018

2.  Frequency of inadequate chicken cross-contamination prevention and cooking practices in restaurants.

Authors:  Laura Green Brown; Shivangi Khargonekar; Lisa Bushnell
Journal:  J Food Prot       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 2.077

3.  Challenges of investigating a large food-borne norovirus outbreak across all branches of a restaurant group in the United Kingdom, October 2016.

Authors:  Mari Morgan; Vicky Watts; David Allen; Daniele Curtis; Amir Kirolos; Neil Macdonald; Ellie Maslen; Deb Morgan; Ayoub Saei; James Sedgwick; Janet Stevenson; Deborah Turbitt; Roberto Vivancos; Catriona Waugh; Chris Williams; Valerie Decraene
Journal:  Euro Surveill       Date:  2019-05

4.  Prevalence and phenotypic characterization of Salmonella enterica isolates from three species of wild marine turtles in Grenada, West Indies.

Authors:  Jonnel J Edwards; Victor A Amadi; Esteban Soto; Michele T Jay-Russel; Peiman Aminabadi; Kirsten Kenelty; Kate Charles; Gitanjali Arya; Ketna Mistry; Roxanne Nicholas; Brian P Butler; David Marancik
Journal:  Vet World       Date:  2021-01-25
  4 in total

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