Author:
CONATY S.,BIRD P.,BELL G.,KRAA E.,GROHMANN G.,McANULTY J. M.
Abstract
Between 22 January and 4 April 1997, 467 hepatitis A cases were reported to the New South
Wales Health Department, Australia. To identify the cause of the outbreak, we conducted a
matched case-control study, and an environmental investigation. Among 66 cases and 66
postcode-matched controls, there was a strong association between illness and consumption of
oysters (adjusted odds ratio 42; 95% confidence interval 5–379). More than two-thirds of cases
reported eating oysters, including one third of cases and no controls who reported eating
oysters in the Wallis Lake area. A public warning was issued on 14 February, and Wallis Lake
oysters were withdrawn from sale. Hepatitis A virus was subsequently identified in oyster
samples taken from the lake. Hepatitis A virus poses a special risk to consumers who eat raw
oysters because it can survive for long periods in estuaries and cause severe disease.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
92 articles.
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