Outbreak of Norovirus Associated with Gulf Coast Oysters, TN, 2009 Sarah Hill and Margaret Zylstra Tennessee Department of Health, Chattanooga- Hamilton County Health Department
Norovirus Common Low infectious dose Human fecal pathogen Contaminates fresh and marine waters Environmentally stable
Not the reservoir for norovirus Filter water over gills and mantle, 5 L/h Viruses and bacteria Frequently consumed raw
Public Health Investigation Outbreak? –3/9, 3 ill persons call CHR report eating raw oysters at Restaurant A Environmental investigation –Facility inspected –Score of 83, one critical violation Chicken salad holding at 45° F rather than <41° F All oyster storage and serving was adequate –Raw oysters (n=24) and tags collected from restaurant
Investigation Results Case definition: Person who developed vomiting and/or diarrhea within 3 days of eating at Restaurant A 3/5-3/7 13 ill identified and 30 controls enrolled 4 confirmed norovirus genogroup 1 Cases from TN, AL, GA, MO No ill restaurant staff Oysters: negative for norovirus
A2C oysters consumed at Restaurant A
FoodOR95% CIP value Raw Oysters < Fried Oysters Fire-roasted Oysters Salad Other entrée
Actions 3/14 CHR and Tennessee DOH inform FDA of epi association Mississippi Dept of Marine Resources –3/17 closed harvest area –Recalled 2/24 harvest –Recommended cooking oysters harvested 2/25-3/17 Tennessee (3/20) and FDA (3/21) advised consumers to avoid oysters harvested 2/25-3/17
Discussion
Surveillance and rapid investigation, cooperation of Restaurant A key Epi data v. lab data Mississippi investigating illness reports Mississippi Dept of Marine Resources has requested FDA assistance to evaluate potential sources of contamination
Questions? Tennessee Department of Health Communicable and Environmental Diseases 1 st Floor, Cordell Hull Building th Avenue North Nashville, TN