Norovirus attribution study: Detection of norovirus from the commercial food preparation environment in outbreak and non-outbreak premises

Author:

Elviss Nicola C.1,Allen David J.234ORCID,Kelly Daniel5,Akello Joyce Odeke4ORCID,Hau Sarah5,Fox Andrew J.6,Hopkins Mark7ORCID,Derrick Jade4ORCID,O'Brien Sarah8,Iturriza-Gomara Miren35,

Affiliation:

1. Food, Water and Environmental Microbiology Services United Kingdom Health Security Agency London UK

2. Department of Infection Biology, Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine London UK

3. NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Gastrointestinal Infections Liverpool UK

4. Virus Reference Department United Kingdom Health Security Agency London UK

5. Institute of Infection and Global Health University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

6. Field Services United Kingdom Health Security Agency London UK

7. Liverpool Clinical Laboratories Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Trust Liverpool UK

8. The Farr Institute@HeRC, University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

Abstract

Abstract Aims Norovirus remains the most significant virological risk that is transmitted via food and the environment to cause acute gastroenteritis. This study aimed to investigate the hypothesis that the contamination of the commercial food production environment with norovirus will be higher in premises that have recently reported a foodborne norovirus outbreak than those that have not. Methods Sampling of commercial food production environments was carried out across a 16-month period between January 2015 and April 2016 in the South East and the North West of England by local authority environmental health departments as part of routine surveillance visits to premises. A total of 2982 samples, 2038 virological and 944 bacteriological, were collected from 256 premises. Sixteen of these premises, six from South East and ten from North West England, were sampled as part of a public health outbreak investigation. Results & Conclusions Overall, 2038 swabs were submitted for norovirus testing, with an average of eight swabs per premises (range 4 to 23) and a median of seven. Of the premises sampled, 11.7% (30/256) yielded at least one norovirus-positive sample (environmental, and/or food handler hand swab), and 2.5% of the swabs were positive for norovirus. A peak in the positivity rate was seen in the South East in April 2016. No associations were found between norovirus positivity and bacteriology indicators, or between bacteriology indicators and hygiene ratings. Significance and impact of study This study demonstrates that food premises and food handlers remain a potential source of norovirus transmission and outbreaks.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Biotechnology

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