| Literature DB >> 32298181 |
R Paul McClung1, Mateusz Karwowski1, Caroline Castillo1, Jevon McFadden1, Sarah Collier1, Jim Collins1, Marty Soehnlen1, Stephen Dietrich1, Eija Trees1, Grete Wilt1, Christina Harrington1, Ashley Miller1, Elizabeth Adam1, Hannah Reses1, Jennifer Cope1, Katie Fullerton1, Vincent Hill1, Jonathan Yoder1.
Abstract
Objectives. To investigate a shigellosis outbreak in Genesee County, Michigan (including the City of Flint), and Saginaw County, Michigan, in 2016 and address community concerns about the role of the Flint water system.Methods. We met frequently with community members to understand concerns and develop the investigation. We surveyed households affected by the outbreak, analyzed Shigella isolate data, examined the geospatial distribution of cases, and reviewed available water quality data.Results. We surveyed 83 households containing 158 cases; median age was 10 years. Index case-patients from 55 of 83 households (66%) reported contact with a person outside their household who wore diapers or who had diarrhea in the week before becoming ill; results were similar regardless of household drinking water source. Genomic diversity was not consistent with a point source. In Flint, no space-time clustering was identified, and average free chlorine residual values remained above recommended levels throughout the outbreak period.Conclusions. The outbreak was most likely caused by person-to-person contact and not by the Flint water system. Consistent community engagement was essential to the design and implementation of the investigation.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32298181 PMCID: PMC7204462 DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2020.305577
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Public Health ISSN: 0090-0036 Impact factor: 9.308