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OUTBREAKS INVOLVING FOOD & LODGING ESTABLISHMENTS PARTNERSHIPS NEEDED FOR A SUCCESSFUL INVESTIGATION Carl Williams Melissa Ham Nicole Lee.

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Presentation on theme: "OUTBREAKS INVOLVING FOOD & LODGING ESTABLISHMENTS PARTNERSHIPS NEEDED FOR A SUCCESSFUL INVESTIGATION Carl Williams Melissa Ham Nicole Lee."— Presentation transcript:

1 OUTBREAKS INVOLVING FOOD & LODGING ESTABLISHMENTS PARTNERSHIPS NEEDED FOR A SUCCESSFUL INVESTIGATION Carl Williams Melissa Ham Nicole Lee

2 Presentation Content  Why do we care about foodborne outbreaks?  What partners need to be involved and why?  How does this partnership work during an outbreak?  What are some common conflicts between partners?  Are there resources for partners?  Q & A

3 Why do we care about foodborne outbreaks?

4  Potential illness reaching the masses  Intentional vs accidental contamination  Possible wide distribution of a contaminated item  Vulnerable populations  Loss of days worked, wages, business, trust

5 Real Life Events: Salmonella

6 Total Ill 100 Hospitalized 8 Counties Represented 11 Ages 17yrs-81yrs Median: 45 yrs

7 Real Life Events: Salmonella

8 Total Ill 104 Hospitalized 14 Counties Represented 5 Ages 3yrs – 85yrs Median: 55yrs

9 Real Life Events: Norovirus

10 Real Life Events: Hepatitis A

11 What partners need to be involved and why?

12 What partners need to be involved?

13  Laboratory

14 What partners need to be involved?  Environmental Health  Laboratory

15 What partners need to be involved?  Epidemiology  Environmental Health  Laboratory

16 What partners need to be involved?  Epidemiology  Environmental Health  Laboratory

17 What partners need to be involved?  Epidemiology  Environmental Health  Laboratory

18 What partners need to be involved?  Epidemiology  Environmental Health  Laboratory

19 What partners need to be involved?  Epidemiology  Environmental Health  Laboratory

20 Purpose of partners  Agent specific  Verify diagnosis  Outbreak specific  Identify source  Implement control measures LaboratoryEpidemiology  Facility specific  Identify exposure and transmission opportunities  Implement control measures Environmental Health

21 One example… When has this worked?

22 Real Life Event: Salmonella

23 Monday, May 13, 2013 Day 1

24  Fifteen ill with N/V/D (some bloody)  10 / 15 hotel staff (3/10 food handlers)  1 hospitalized  Two of three samples (+ Salmonella)  May 8 th was the first onset 4pm - Conference call Local Health Dept: Epi, Env Hlth State: Epi, Env Hlth, Lab, Public Affairs 10:00am – Call from CD Nurse

25 Day 1 Summary of Actions/Decisions  Confirm the story  Implement control measures with hotel/rest.  Interview ill  Coordinate hotel assessment with Env Hlth  Coordinate stool specimen collection, shipment, and testing with state lab  Develop communication tools  Send statewide & national alerts to identify additional cases  Request receipts from hotel (case-control study)  Develop survey from hotel menu  Send state staff to Cumberland to assist with summarizing data and data entry

26 3 Partners with 1 Goal Food & Lodging Outbreak Laboratory Test stool samples Environmental Health Assess facilities Epidemiology Coordinate activities Interview patients Characterize ill Stop the Outbreak

27 Activities of partners  Test stool  Grow isolate  Biochem tests  Subtyping  PFGE  Environmental testing (partner labs)  Coordinate activities  Characterize illness  Analyze data from all partners LaboratoryEpidemiology  Facility Assessment  Processes  Employees Environmental Health

28 Results Laboratory Environmental Health Epidemiology

29 Laboratory Results  54 specimens tested  2 (4%) unsatisfactory  27 (50%) negative  25 (46%) positive 25 (100%) Salmonella typhimurium 25 (100%) had the same matching PFGE pattern

30 Environmental Health Results  Environmental Assessments  Risk Factors  Personal Hygiene  Approved Source  Contamination  Holding  Cooking  Interviews  Trainings

31 Environmental Health Actions  Required reportable BIG 5  Tools  Three legged stool Employee Health Hand washing No Bare Hand Contact of Ready to Eat food  Risk Control Plans  Enforcement

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35 Epidemiology Results Total Ill 100 Hospitalized 8 Counties Represented 11 Ages 17yrs-81yrs Median: 45 yrs Exposure Relative Risk FOOD Employee Potluck0.62 Café Breakfast Buffet0.89 Café Lunch Buffet1.09 All American Grill 3.6 WORK TASK All American Grill Supervisor 4.3 RESULTS Those who ate/drank at the All American Grill were 3.6 times more likely to become ill when compared to those who did not eat/drink at the All American Grill

36 Process Results  After outbreaks are over the following questions are asked of those involved:  What worked well during this outbreak?  What did not work well during this outbreak?  What recommendations do you have to improve the handling of future outbreaks?

37 What are some common conflicts between partners?

38 Potential conflicts with partners  Not aware of numerous incoming specimens  Specimens may be un- satisfactory  Interest in accompanying EH during facility assessments  Timing of lab results can feel delayed LaboratoryEpidemiology  Expanded workload  Additional team members on site Environmental Health

39 Potential conflicts with partners  Feels like state is taking over instead of assisting  Nursing staff pulled from clinic to address outbreak needs  Ensure the county is happy with how the outbreak is lead  Ensuring the same message is communicated to the public Local Health DeptState Health Dept

40 Conflict resolution  Establish relationships with partners before or outside of an outbreak situation  Who is your point of contact and what can they do for you  Understand the role of each partner  What do they do and why  Do they have the resources the response requires  Communication  How often is everyone updated and through what method  Take the opportunity to both learn from others and share your knowledge

41 Are there resources for partners?

42 Partnership Resources  SLPH website  CDC resources  MOA with other states for surge capacity  NC Online Communicable Disease Manual  APHL Control of Communicable Disease Manual LaboratoryEpidemiology  NC Food Code  Online EH training for Assessments during Outbreaks http://www.cdc. gov/nceh/ehs/e Learn/EA_FIO/ http://www.cdc. gov/nceh/ehs/e Learn/EA_FIO/ Environmental Health

43 Partnership Resources LaboratoryEpidemiology Environmental Health

44 Partnership Resources LaboratoryEpidemiology NC Food Code Cheat Sheet Environmental Health

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47 Q & A?

48 Carl Williams, Public Health Veterinarian carl.williams@dhhs.nc.gov, 919-733-0391 carl.williams@dhhs.nc.gov Melissa Ham, Regional Environmental Health Specialist melissa.ham@dhhs.nc.gov, 910-303-9247 melissa.ham@dhhs.nc.gov Nicole Lee, Foodborne Epidemiologist nicole.lee@dhhs.nc.gov, 919-715-1162 nicole.lee@dhhs.nc.gov Thank You


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