| Literature DB >> 28065212 |
E Mazengia1, V Kawakami2, K Rietberg2, M Kay2, P Wyman1, C Skilton1, A Aberra3, J Boonyaratanakornkit3, A P Limaye3, S A Pergam3, E Whimbey3, R J Olsen-Scribner3, J S Duchin2.
Abstract
One case of hospital-acquired listeriosis was linked to milkshakes produced in a commercial-grade shake freezer machine. This machine was found to be contaminated with a strain of Listeria monocytogenes epidemiologically and molecularly linked to a contaminated pasteurized, dairy-based ice cream product at the same hospital a year earlier, despite repeated cleaning and sanitizing. Healthcare facilities should be aware of the potential for prolonged Listeria contamination of food service equipment. In addition, healthcare providers should consider counselling persons who have an increased risk for Listeria infections regarding foods that have caused Listeria infections. The prevalence of persistent Listeria contamination of commercial-grade milkshake machines in healthcare facilities and the risk associated with serving dairy-based ice cream products to hospitalized patients at increased risk for invasive L. monocytogenes infections should be further evaluated.Entities:
Keywords: Listeria ; Hospital-acquired (nosocomial) infections; listeriosis; milkshake machine
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28065212 PMCID: PMC5359046 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268816003198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Fig. 1.Timeline of epidemiological, environmental and laboratory investigation of a hospital-acquired listeriosis linked to milkshakes produced in a persistently contaminated shake freezer machine. , Machines A and B at hospital A; , patient 3's milkshake consumption at hospital A; , patient 3's hospitalization at hospital A.
Sampling for Listeria monocytogenes at hospital A, November to December, 2015
| Collection date | Sample location | Machine | No. of samples | Collection method* | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 Nov. 2015 | Dispensed mix | B | 6 | Dispensed into Whirlpak | Positive ( |
| 25 Nov. 2015 | Mix tank (hopper) | B | 2 | Ice cream mix scooped from reservoir | Positive ( |
| 25 Nov. 2015 | Mix tank (hopper) | B | 4 | Sponge swab of side walls | Positive ( |
| 25 Nov. 2015 | Freezer cylinder | B | 6 | Sponge swab of nozzle pieces | Positive ( |
| 25 Nov. 2015 | Mix tank (hopper) | A | 2 | Sponge swab of side walls | Negative |
| 25 Nov. 2015 | Freezer cylinder | A | 6 | Sponge swab of nozzle pieces | Negative |
| 25 Nov. 2015 | Liquid ice cream mix | n.a. | 2† | Unopened 1·89-l cartons | Negative |
| 4 Dec. 2015 | Liquid ice cream mix | n.a. | 9† | Unopened 1·89-l cartons | Negative |
| 4 Dec. 2015 | Kitchen surfaces‡ | n.a. | 25 | Sponge swabs of various kitchen surfaces | Negative |
n.a., Not applicable.
* All samples were collected by PHSKC Food Protection Program personnel.
† Unopened ice cream mix cartons were from different lots (n = 6) collected from hospital A walk-in cooler.
‡ Hospital A kitchen surfaces sampled included doorknobs, drawer shelves, food preparation tables, room service carts, sinks, floors, and floor drains.