CDC is collaborating with public health
officials in several states and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to
investigate a multistate outbreak of Salmonella
Typhimurium infections. Joint investigation efforts indicate that
cantaloupe grown in southwestern Indiana is a likely source of this
outbreak. As a result of the initial
investigations by the state health departments in Indiana and Kentucky, a farm
in southwestern Indiana has contacted its distributors, which reach outside
Indiana into other states, and is withdrawing its cantaloupe from the market
place. The farm has agreed to cease distributing cantaloupes for the rest of
the growing season.
Public health investigators are using DNA
“fingerprints” of Salmonella obtained
through diagnostic testing with pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, or PFGE, to
identify cases of illness that may be part of this outbreak. They are using
data from PulseNet, the national subtyping network made up of state and local
public health laboratories and federal food regulatory laboratories that
performs molecular surveillance of foodborne infections.
A total of 141 persons infected with the
outbreak strain of Salmonella Typhimurium
have been reported from 20 states. The
number of ill people identified in each state is as follows: Alabama (7), Arkansas (3), California (2),
Georgia (1), Illinois (17), Indiana (13), Iowa (7), Kentucky (50), Michigan
(6), Minnesota (3), Missouri (9), Mississippi (2), New Jersey (1), North
Carolina (3), Ohio (3), Pennsylvania (2), South Carolina (3), Tennessee (6),
Texas (1), and Wisconsin (2).
Among persons for whom information is
available, illness onset dates range from July 7, 2012 to August 4, 2012. Ill
persons range in age from less than 1 to 92 years, with a median age of 49
years old. Fifty-five percent of ill persons are female. Among 64 persons with
available information, 31 (48%) patients reported being hospitalized. Two
deaths have been reported in Kentucky.
The outbreak can be visually described with
a chart showing the number of persons who became ill each day. This chart is
called an epidemic curve or epi curve.
This pattern has been seen before in PulseNet, and in the past typically
caused 10-15 cases per month. Illnesses that occurred after July 26, 2012,
might not be reported yet due to the time it takes between when a person
becomes ill and when the illness is reported.
Source: http://www.cdc.gov/salmonella/typhimurium-cantaloupe-08-12/index.html
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