| Literature DB >> 30441782 |
Franciska M Schets1, Harold H J L van den Berg2, Harry Vennema3, Manon T M Pelgrim4, Cees Collé5, Saskia A Rutjes6, Willemijn J Lodder7.
Abstract
Swimming in fecally contaminated recreational water may lead to gastrointestinal illness. A recreational water-associated outbreak of norovirus (NoV) infections affecting at least 100 people in The Netherlands occurred in August 2012. Questionnaire responses from patients indicated swimming in recreational lake Zeumeren as the most likely cause of illness. Most patients visited the lake during the weekend of 18⁻19 August, during which the weather was exceptionally warm (maximum temperatures 32⁻33 °C), and visitor numbers elevated. Patients, mostly children, became ill with gastroenteritis 1⁻6 days (median 2 days) after exposure. Four stool samples from patients were NoV GI positive. Subsurface sandy soil from one of the beaches where most patients swam was NoV GI positive; the water sample was negative. The epidemiological curve and the timeline of investigation based on reported symptoms demonstrate the difficulty in discovering the source in recreational water outbreaks. A NoV outbreak in a recreational lake that is not subjected to external fecal contamination sources shows the need for active communication about human shedding of viruses during and after diarrheal episodes and the advice to refrain from swimming, even a few weeks after the symptoms have resolved.Entities:
Keywords: norovirus; outbreak; recreational water; swimming
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30441782 PMCID: PMC6267268 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15112550
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Recreational water lake Zeumeren, The Netherlands, with beaches 1—10 and sampling points. A—C. Beaches 1—2 and 3 are the official beaches, which are sampled for monitoring according to the EU BWD [18]. Sampling points for the outbreak investigation: A—water and subsurface sandy soil sample taken, B and C—subsurface sandy soil samples taken.
Figure 2Epidemiological curve, indicating the days on which the cases (ntotal = 45) were exposed and their first day of illness, and the timeline of the outbreak investigation.