The Elderly and WaterborneCryptosporidiumInfection: Gastroenteritis Hospitalizations before and during the 1993 Milwaukee Outbreak

0301 basic medicine Cryptosporidiosis Cryptosporidium Infectious and parasitic diseases RC109-216 elderly Disease Outbreaks 03 medical and health sciences Wisconsin susceptible population Animals Humans Aged Aged, 80 and over research outbreak cryptosporidiosis Research R Gastroenteritis 3. Good health Hospitalization surveillance Medicine Emergency Service, Hospital Water Microbiology
DOI: 10.3201/eid0904.020260 Publication Date: 2012-06-16T03:58:34Z
ABSTRACT
We used the Temporal Exposure Response Surfaces modeling technique to examine the association between gastroenteritis-related emergency room visits and hospitalizations in the elderly and drinking water turbidity before and during the 1993 Milwaukee waterborne Cryptosporidium outbreak. Before the outbreak, the rate of such events increased with age in the elderly (p</=0.001), suggesting that the elderly are at an increased risk. During the outbreak, strong associations between turbidity and gastroenteritis-related emergency room visits and hospitalizations occurred at temporal lags of 5-6 days (consistent with the Cryptosporidium incubation period). A pronounced second wave of these illnesses in the elderly peaked at 13 days. This wave represented approximately 40% of all excess cases in the elderly. Our findings suggest that the elderly had an increased risk of severe disease due to Cryptosporidium infection, with a shorter incubation period than has been previously reported in all adults and with a high risk for secondary person-to-person transmission.
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