1. Norovirus outbreaks due to contaminated drinking water and probable person-to-person transmission, Kerala, India, 2021.
- Author
-
Rajeevan A, Sakthivel M, Menon N, Kc S, Sudersanan H, Nagarajan R, Raju M, Murali S, Girish Kumar CP, Balakrishnan A, Raveendran R, Perumbil D, Antherjanam D, Joseph Xavier Kallupurackal S, Balakrishnan B, Krishna N, Samuel S, Kaur P, and Murehkar MV
- Subjects
- Humans, India epidemiology, Male, Female, Adult, Case-Control Studies, Retrospective Studies, Adolescent, Middle Aged, Child, Young Adult, Child, Preschool, Risk Factors, Infant, Water Supply, Aged, Water Microbiology, Caliciviridae Infections epidemiology, Caliciviridae Infections transmission, Disease Outbreaks, Norovirus isolation & purification, Drinking Water virology, Gastroenteritis epidemiology, Gastroenteritis virology, Feces virology
- Abstract
Background: In July 2021, the Alappuzha district in Kerala, India, reported an unexpected number of acute gastroenteritis (772) cases (Outbreak A). On October 10, 2021, a university in Wayanad, Kerala, reported 25 acute gastroenteritis cases (Outbreak B). We described both the outbreaks and determined the agent, source and risk factors., Methods: We defined a suspected case as the occurrence of vomiting or at least three episodes of loose stools within 24 h and a confirmed case as those with stool samples/rectal swabs positive for norovirus. We did a matched case-control study in Outbreak A and a retrospective cohort study in Outbreak B. We calculated the adjusted odds ratio (aOR) in outbreak A, relative risk (aRR) in outbreak B and population attributable fraction (PAF). We tested stool and water samples for bacteria and viruses., Results: We identified Group II norovirus in stool samples in both outbreaks and 4/5 water samples in Outbreak A. Suspected norovirus infection was associated with drinking inadequately boiled water from the municipal water supply in outbreak A [aOR: 4.5; 95 % C.I: 1.2-15.8; PAF: 0.23] and well water in hostels in outbreak B [aRR: 2.2; 95 % C.I: 1.2-3.9; PAF: 0.15]. In Outbreak A, groundwater from tube wells was mixed in the municipal water supply overhead tanks without chlorination., Conclusion: The gastroenteritis outbreaks were caused by Group II norovirus due to the consumption of inadequately boiled contaminated groundwater (outbreak A) and well water (outbreak B). We recommended superchlorination of overhead tanks and wells and boiled water for drinking., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper. Conflict of interest None., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF