| Literature DB >> 24898166 |
Aron J Hall, Mary E Wikswo, Kimberly Pringle, L Hannah Gould, Umesh D Parashar.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Norovirus is the leading cause of acute gastroenteritis and foodborne disease in the United States, causing an estimated one in 15 U.S. residents to become ill each year as well as 56,000-71,000 hospitalizations and 570-800 deaths, predominantly among young children and the elderly. Whereas noroviruses often spread through person-to-person contact, foodborne transmission can cause widespread exposures and presents important prevention opportunities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24898166 PMCID: PMC5779359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
FIGURE 1Number of reported norovirus outbreaks, by primary transmission mode and month of onset — National Outbreak Reporting System, United States, 2009–2012
* Includes person-to-person, waterborne, environmental contamination, and other or unknown transmission modes.
FIGURE 2Number and rate of reported foodborne norovirus outbreaks (per 1 million person-years*), by state — National Outbreak Reporting System, United States, 2009–2012
* Legend indicates rate ranges divided by quartile.
Number and percentage of reported foodborne and nonfoodborne norovirus outbreaks, by setting* — National Outbreak Reporting System, United States, 2009–2012
| Foodborne | Nonfoodborne | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Setting | No. | (%) | No. | (%) |
| Restaurant | 574 | (64) | 38 | (1) |
| Catering or banquet facility | 151 | (17) | 8 | (0.3) |
| Private residence | 37 | (4) | 32 | (0.1) |
| School | 13 | (1) | 148 | (6) |
| Long-term care facility | 12 | (1) | 2,060 | (80) |
| Hospital | 2 | (0.2) | 115 | (4) |
| Day care | 1 | (0.1) | 52 | (2) |
| Other/Multiple settings | 114 | (13) | 137 | (5) |
| All settings | 904 | (100) | 2,590 | (100) |
A setting was reported in 904 (90%) of 1,008 foodborne outbreaks and in 2,590 (78%) of 3,310 nonfoodborne outbreaks.
Includes person-to-person, waterborne, environmental contamination, and other or unknown transmission modes.
Number and percentage of persons with illness associated with reported foodborne and nonfoodborne norovirus outbreaks, by selected characteristics and outcomes — National Outbreak Reporting System, United States, 2009–2012
| Foodborne | Nonfoodborne | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Characteristic/Outcome | No. | (%) | No. | (%) |
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| Male | 9,285 | (44) | 42,112 | (30) |
| Female | 11,780 | (56) | 98,076 | (70) |
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| 0–4 | 481 | (2) | 2,178 | (2) |
| 5–19 | 2,959 | (14) | 18,621 | (13) |
| 20–49 | 9,558 | (45) | 24,619 | (18) |
| 50–74 | 7,002 | (33) | 24,910 | (18) |
| ≥75 | 1,064 | (5) | 69,860 | (50) |
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| Outpatient visit | 1,102 | (7) | 3,848 | (7) |
| Emergency department visit | 520 | (4) | 1,109 | (2) |
| Hospitalization | 203 | (1) | 2,309 | (2) |
| Death | 2 | (0.01) | 302 | (0.3) |
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Includes person-to-person, waterborne, environmental contamination, and other or unknown transmission modes.
Proportions of illness by age and sex among persons for whom such data were reported were extrapolated to include all patients from reported norovirus outbreaks, including those without such data.
Proportions based on specific known outcomes where such data were reported; thus, each proportion was calculated using a different denominator.