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- F J Mahoney, T A Farley, B J Moriniere, D K Winsor, R L Silberman, and L M McFarland.
- Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals, New Orleans 70160.
- Am J Prev Med. 1991 Sep 1; 7 (5): 292297292-7.
AbstractCommunity-wide outbreaks of shigellosis are a persistent public health problem. We evaluated the effect of a household-based intervention program on the control of an urban outbreak of S. sonnei gastroenteritis. During the intervention we attempted to contact all households with culture-confirmed S. sonnei and provide education in methods to prevent spread of Shigella. Subsequently we conducted a survey of intervention (n = 43) and nonintervention (n = 33) households. We also conducted a serosurvey of children three to five years of age. The number of new cases of S. sonnei infection declined steadily over several months after the intervention began. Members of the intervention households were more knowledgeable about handwashing (rate ratio [RR] 4.7, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.1-10.8) and others methods of S. sonnei transmission and control than members of nonintervention households. However, intervention households had higher attack rates of Shigella-associated diarrhea in susceptible household members (RR 1.4, 95% CI = 1.0-2.0). During the intervention we were able to contact only 25% of households by the eighth day after onset of diarrhea in the index case, when 90% of intrahousehold transmission of Shigella had already occurred. Two months after the outbreak ended, 42% of children in the outbreak community had elevated antibody titers against S. sonnei; an additional 19% had borderline elevated titers. The intervention program improved knowledge but may have occurred too late to prevent intrahousehold transmission of Shigella. Exhaustion of susceptible hosts, rather than the education program, likely accounted for the decline in shigellosis cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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