Title: Foodborne Disease Outbreak Investigation Team Training:
1Foodborne Disease Outbreak Investigation Team
Training
- Module 2 Foodborne Disease Surveillance and
Outbreak Detection
2Module Learning Objectives
- At the end of this module, you will be able to
- Describe the surveillance of foodborne illness
through notification/complaint systems. - List ways to improve the accuracy of a food
history obtained in a foodborne illness
complaint. - Describe the surveillance of foodborne illness
through pathogen-specific surveillance. - Recognize a possible outbreak using a
notification/complaint system or
pathogen-specific surveillance. - Describe the role of local public health in
national pathogen-specific surveillance.
3Foodborne Disease Surveillance
- Many ways to find out about cases of foodborne
illnesses and outbreaks - Two primary means
- Foodborne illness notification/complaint systems
- Pathogen-specific surveillance (notifiable
disease reporting)
4Foodborne Illness Notification/Complaint Systems
5Notification/Complaint Systems
- Complaints of illness among individuals and
groups reported by affected members of the
community (and others) - Includes any illness thought to be related to
food - Common exposures are used to link cases together
gt Notifications/complaints
6Steps in Receiving Complaints
?
Illness in individual or group
Complaint to local health department
Documentation of information
gt Notifications/complaints
7Interview of Complainant
?
(e.g., name, age, and
sex)
- Who is affected?
- What is the problem?
- When did problem occur?
- Where?
- Why/how?
(e.g.,
symptoms, diagnosis)
(e.g., date/time of onset)
(e.g., place of residence and
exposure)
(e.g., travel, water, contact
with ill persons or animals, suspect food or
meal, food history)
Example in appendix
gt Notifications/complaints
8Collecting Food Histories
- Complete food history important including
- Foods eaten in 5 days before onset of illness
- If illness suggestive of norovirus, focus on
24-48 hours before illness. - If gt1 ill person, focus on shared foods/meals.
- ALL foods eaten during time period of interest
(unless focusing on shared foods/meals) - Details of named events, food establishments, or
suspect food products - Information on non-food exposures
gt Notifications/complaints
9Small Group Exercise
- Divide into groups of two. One person will be the
interviewer one will be the complainant. - The interviewer should solicit a 5-day food
history from the complainant. - The complainant should respond to questions as if
they just developed symptoms that day and based
on what they really ate in the last 5 days. - Was it easy or difficult? Did you get a complete
food history? What approaches were helpful?
Be prepared to share your experience with the
class.
Time 10 minutes
10Improving Food Histories
Have complainant
- Look at a calendar
- Describe each meal in time period
- Identify key events to jog memory
- Review receipts or menus
- Enlist help of dining partners
- Consider specific list of foods
- Think about food preferences
- Rule out or rule in specific foods
gt Notifications/complaints
11Entering Information into Log
- Extract key information from the complaint to
facilitate examination of reports over time - Date of illness onset
- Predominant signs and symptoms
- Name of food thought to have caused illness
- Names of eating places or gatherings
- Source of water and type
- Other exposures
- Transfer information carefully
- Use consistent abbreviations and codes
gt Notifications/complaints
12Evaluation of Complaints
- Individual reports of concern
- Symptoms suggestive of serious illnesses
- Laboratory-confirmed diagnoses
- Reports of obvious food safety problems
- Group illnesses thought to be due to an
identified, shared exposure
gt Notifications/complaints
13Group Illnesses Due to Identified, Shared Exposure
- Illnesses are likely to be related to an
identified, shared exposure (e.g. particular
meal, event, or establishment), if group members
have - Similar signs and symptoms
- Shared a food or meal prior to onset of illness
and had no other common exposures - Onset and nature of illness is consistent with
identified shared exposure
gt Notifications/complaints
14Class Question
?
Which of the following group illnesses are likely
to be due to the identified restaurant exposure?
Due to Exposure
- Person developed diarrhea after eating at a
restaurant. Neighbors who ate at the restaurant
also are sick but complainant does not know their
symptoms.
- Four friends develop nausea and vomiting, facial
flushing, headache, and itching skin within an
hour of eating fish at a restaurant.
Family members develop bloody diarrhea within
hours of eating at a restaurant.
gt Notifications/complaints
15Evaluation of Complaints (contd)
- Looking at reports over time
- Multiple individual complaints with same exposure
(e.g., same food establishment or food) - Multiple individual complaints with clustering by
time, place, or person - Overall increase in complaints
gt Notifications/complaints
16Response to Notifications/Complaints
- Notify epidemiology unit/communicable disease
staff of laboratory-confirmed diagnoses. - Refer food safety problem to agency with
regulatory authority. - Alert appropriate persons if possible outbreak
detected. - Prioritize follow-up of
commercial establishments.
gt Notifications/complaints
17Follow-up of Commercial Establishments
- Rational approach to follow-up
- As required by local law/statute or
- If complainant observed specific food safety
problem or - If two or more persons (not from same household)
- Have similar illness
- Shared history of eating at
establishment - Onset and nature of illness
consistent with shared foods
gt Notifications/complaints
18Group Exercise
Divide into groups by table. Study the foodborne
illness log at the end of this module spanning a
2-week period and determine
- Is the number of complaints what you would expect
for the period covered? - Are there individual complaints of concern?
- Are there common exposures (e.g. foods,
establishments) across complaints signaling an
outbreak?
Be prepared to share your thoughts with the class.
Time 10 minutes
19Strengths of Notification/Complaint Systems
- Primary means to detect outbreaks that are
- Localized (involving only one jurisdiction)
- Due to diseases with a short incubation period
gt Notifications/complaints
20Notification/Complaint System Issues
- Inaccurate and incomplete food histories
- Large numbers of complaints
- Anonymous complaints
- Complaints with unknown causative agent
- Inability to exclude unrelated cases
- Inability to link cases based on illness unless
symptoms very unique or cases report similar
exposure
gt Notifications/complaints
21Pathogen-specific Surveillance
22Pathogen-specific Surveillance
- Also called reportable diseases, notifiable
diseases, or laboratory-based reporting - Reports of individual laboratory-confirmed cases
of foodborne disease by medical and laboratory
staff with submission of clinical isolates, where
requested - Only covers diseases selected by
public health agency - Cases linked to each other by
common pathogen
gt Pathogen-specific
23Steps in Pathogen-specific Surveillance
?
Illness in individual
gt Pathogen-specific
24Initial Report
- From health-care provider or laboratory
- Standardized form (often pathogen-specific)
- Information of interest
- Patient identifiers
- Basic demographic information
- Clinical information
- Laboratory results
Example in appendix
gt Pathogen-specific
25Follow-up Interview of Case
- To identify potential exposures leading to
illness - Similar to interview for notification/complaint
system but tailored to specific pathogen - High-risk food exposures for agent
- Other exposures related to agent (e.g., contact
with ill people, animals, water) - Often occurs weeks after
exposure leading to illness
resulting in poor recall
gt Pathogen-specific
26Laboratory Characterization of Pathogen
- Submission of patient isolate to public health
laboratory for confirmation and subtyping - Increased detail about the pathogen (e.g.,
serotyping, PFGE) improves - Recognition of clusters
- Linking an outbreak with an exposure
- Most critical with common
pathogens
gt Pathogen-specific
27Analysis for Clusters
- Examine cases by pathogen over time using
- Different levels of specificity of pathogen
(e.g., species, selected subtypes) - Subgroups of population (certain time, place, or
person characteristics) - Look for increase in number of cases over
expected or baseline, indicating
a cluster
gt Pathogen-specific
28Analysis by Causative Agent
Lab-confirmed salmonellosis cases by month of
diagnosis, 2010.
All Salmonella
Number of Case
Month of Diagnosis
gt Pathogen-specific
29Analysis by Causative Agent Subtype
Lab-confirmed salmonellosis cases by month of
diagnosis
All Salmonella
Number of Case
Salmonella Javiana
Month of Diagnosis
gt Pathogen-specific
30Analysis by Causative Agent and Age Group
Lab-confirmed salmonellosis cases by month of
diagnosis
All Salmonella
Number of Cases
Salmonella Javiana among persons lt5 yrs.
Salmonella Javiana
Month of Diagnosis
gt Pathogen-specific
31Strengths of Pathogen-specific Surveillance
- Primary means to detect outbreaks that are
- Wide-spread (i.e., multijurisdictional),
- Due to prolonged low-level food contamination, or
- Due to diseases with a long incubation (e.g.,
hepatitis A)
gt Pathogen-specific
32Pathogen-specific Surveillance Issues
?
- Incomplete detection and reporting
gt Pathogen-specific
33Pathogen-specific Surveillance Issues
?
- Incomplete detection and reporting
gt Pathogen-specific
34Pathogen-specific Surveillance Issues
- Incomplete detection and reporting
- Availability of isolate for further
characterization
gt Pathogen-specific
35Comparison of Surveillance Systems
Notification/ complaint system Pathogen-specific surveillance
Types of foodborne illnesses detected All Only selected diseases
Initiating event Consumer complaint Positive lab result
Means to link cases Common exposures Same pathogen
Linkage of cases across jurisdictions Not usually Yes
Exclusion of unrelated cases Difficult Good
Speed Fast Relatively slow
Types of outbreaks best detected Localized outbreaks short incubation illnesses Widespread low-level contamination events long incubation illnesses
36National Pathogen-Specific Surveillance Systems
37National Pathogen-specific Surveillance
- NNDSS (National Notifiable Disease Surveillance
System) - Data from pathogen-specific surveillance
forwarded to CDC (minimal case information) - Statistical algorithm used to identify increases
- PulseNet (National Molecular Subtyping Network
for Foodborne Disease Surveillance) - Laboratory network that uses standardized pulsed
field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) methods - PFGE patterns uploaded by labs for STEC,
Salmonella, Shigella, Listeria, Campylobacter - Comparisons of patterns to identify clusters
gt National surveillance
38National Pathogen-specific Surveillance
- CaliciNet (National Electronic Norovirus Outbreak
Network) - Laboratory network that subtypes/sequences
norovirus isolates related to outbreaks - Data uploaded to CDC allows linkage of outbreaks
and identification of new variants - NARMS (National Antimicrobial Resistance
Monitoring Systementeric bacteria) - Submission of Salmonella, Shigella, E. coli O157,
Campylobacter, and non-cholerae Vibrio to CDC - Determines trends in antimicrobial resistance
gt National surveillance
39Role of Local Health Departments
- Local pathogen-specific case reports and
laboratory results feed into national
surveillance - Important for local health departments to
- Collect data in format consistent with other
investigators. - Streamline reporting and isolate submission.
- Share case reports with state and submit patient
isolates to public health laboratory as quickly
as possible. - Use national systems to learn about outbreaks in
other jurisdictions.
gt National surveillance
40What difference does one local case make?
- Two E. coli O157H7 infections in MN with same
PFGE pattern both ate tenderized steaks - Through PulseNet, single cases identified in KS
and MI both ate tenderized steaks - Steaks eaten by cases
from same plant - Recall of 739,000 lbs.
of beef - Outbreak generated
high levels of concern
about needle/blade
tenderized steaks
gt National surveillance
41Quick Quiz
42Quick Quiz
- Typically common exposures are used to detect
outbreaks through a foodborne illness
notification/complaint systems whereas a common
pathogen is used to detect outbreaks through
pathogen-specific surveillance systems - True
- False
43Quick Quiz
- Illnesses in a group are likely to be related to
an identified, shared exposure (e.g. particular
meal, event, or establishment), if group members
have which of the following? - Ill persons all have the same symptoms.
- Ill persons shared food or a meal prior to onset
of illness and had no other common exposures. - Onset of the illness is consistent with the
timing of the exposure. - All of the above
44Quick Quiz
- Which of the following can improve the accuracy
of a food history solicited during a foodborne
illness complaint? - Have case look at a calendar and identify key
events to jog memory. - Have case review credit card or cash register
receipts to identify where or what they ate. - Enlist help of dining partners.
- All of the above
45Quick Quiz
- All of the following are true of
pathogen-specific surveillance EXCEPT - Detects all types of foodborne illness.
- Relies on reports from health-care providers and
clinical laboratory staff. - Is the primary means to detect widespread
outbreaks such as multistate outbreaks. - Has an inherent lag in reporting due to time
necessary to confirm pathogen through laboratory
testing.
46Quick Quiz
- All of the following are important roles for
local health departments in national
pathogen-specific surveillance EXCEPT - Collect information on local cases in a format
consistent with other investigators. - Share case reports with state health department
in a timely fashion. - Be alert to outbreaks in other jurisdictions.
- Submit all patient isolates directly to CDC.