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A community outbreak of cryptosporidiosis in Sydney associated with a public swimming facility: a case-control study

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posted on 2024-11-15, 12:33 authored by Darren MayneDarren Mayne, Kelly-Anne Ressler, Diane Smith, Gareth Hockey, Susan J Botham, Mark J Ferson
In February, 2008, the South Eastern Sydney Illawarra Public Health Unit investigated an outbreak of cryptosporidiosis within the south east region of Sydney, Australia. Thirty-one cases with laboratory-confirmed cryptosporidiosis and 97 age- and geographically matched controls selected by random digit dialling were recruited into a case-control study and interviewed for infection risk factors. Cryptosporidiosis was associated with swimming at Facility A (matched odds ratio = 19.4, 95% confidence interval: 3.7-100.8) and exposure to household contacts with diarrhoea (matched odds ratio = 7.7, 95% confidence interval: 1.9-31.4) in multivariable conditional logistic regression models. A protective effect for any animal contact was also found (matched odds ratio = 0.2, 95% confidence interval: 0.1-0.7). Cryptosporidium hominis subtype IbA10G2 was identified in 8 of 11 diagnostic stool samples available for cases. This investigation reaffirms the importance of public swimming pools as potential sources of Cryptosporidium infection and ensuring their compliance with water-quality guidelines. The protective effect of animal contact may be suggestive of past exposure leading to immunity.

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Citation

Mayne, D. J., Ressler, K., Smith, D., Hockey, G., Botham, S. J. & Ferson, M. J. (2011). A community outbreak of cryptosporidiosis in Sydney associated with a public swimming facility: a case-control study. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Infectious Diseases, 2011 341065-1-341065-6.

Journal title

Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Infectious Diseases

Volume

2011

Language

English

RIS ID

83006

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