| Literature DB >> 25062494 |
T Braeye1, K DE Schrijver2, E Wollants3, M van Ranst3, J Verhaegen4.
Abstract
SUMMARY On 6 December 2010 a fire in Hemiksem, Belgium, was extinguished by the fire brigade with both river water and tap water. Local physicians were asked to report all cases of gastroenteritis. We conducted a retrospective cohort study among 1000 randomly selected households. We performed a statistical and geospatial analysis. Human stool samples, tap water and river water were tested for pathogens. Of the 1185 persons living in the 528 responding households, 222 (18·7%) reported symptoms of gastroenteritis during the time period 6-13 December. Drinking tap water was significantly associated with an increased risk for gastroenteritis (relative risk 3·67, 95% confidence interval 2·86-4·70) as was place of residence. Campylobacter sp. (2/56), norovirus GI and GII (11/56), rotavirus (1/56) and Giardia lamblia (3/56) were detected in stool samples. Tap water samples tested positive for faecal indicator bacteria and protozoa. The results support the hypothesis that a point-source contamination of the tap water with river water was the cause of the multi-pathogen waterborne outbreak.Entities:
Keywords: waterborne
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25062494 PMCID: PMC4412073 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268814001629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Fig. 1.Cases over time, subscribers' study, Hemiksem and Schelle, 2010.
Fig. 2.Density cases over non-cases. A redder region indicates a higher proportion of cases over non-cases; dotted line = contour line for significance P < 0·05; full line = contour line for significance P < 0·01; Hemiksem and Schelle, 2010.
Fig. 3.Density of tap-water drinkers over non-tap-water drinkers. A redder region indicates a higher proportion of tap-water drinkers; Hemiksen and Schelle, 2010.
Contingency table for drinking tap water and the different case definitions (for 46 respondents information on tap water consumption was missing), Hemiskem and Schelle, 2010
| Non-cases | Secondary and late cases | Cases | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tapwater | |||||
| No | 549 | 95 | 74 | 718 | |
| % | 73·69 | 55·23 | 33·03 | ||
| Yes | 196 | 77 | 148 | 421 | |
| % | 26·31 | 44·77 | 66·97 | ||
| Total | 745 | 172 | 222 | 1139 |
Univariate analysis of risk factors in cases compared to non-cases, Hemiksem and Schelle, 2010
| Variable | RR | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tap water | 3·67 | 2·86–4·70 | 0·001 |
| Gender (male/female) | 0·8 | 0·6–1·1 | 0·08 |
| Distance to fire site (unit: 750 m) | 0·89 | 0·82–0·97 | 0·04 |
| Young children (<12 years) | 0·9 | 0·7–1·2 | 0·6 |
| Household size | Linear trend | – | 0·43 |
| Age | Linear trend | – | 0·52 |
RR, Relative risk; CI, confidence interval.
Multivariate analysis (Poisson regression) for cases compared to non-cases, Hemiksem and Schelle, 2010
| Variable | RR | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tap water (glasses/day) | 1·21 | 1·16–1·27 | <0·001 |
| Distance to fire site (unit: 250 m) | 0·92 | 0·84–0·99 | <0·04 |
RR, Relative risk; CI, confidence interval.