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Are We Ready for Bioterrorism? Health Personnel were Affected by Contaminated Meat Cooked at a Daily Routine Hospital Kitchen
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 May 2019
Abstract
Salmonellae are gram-negative motile bacilli. The transmission of salmonellae to a susceptible host usually occurs from the consumption of contaminated foods. Most persons infected with Salmonella develop diarrhea, fever, and abdominal cramps 12 to 72 hours after infection. The illness usually lasts four to seven days, but can be severe enough to require hospitalization.
Describe a hospital kitchen based mass foodborne infection.
Descriptive analysis of the foodborne infection event.
310 health personnel were contaminated from lunch that was cooked at our hospital kitchen. On that day 70 patients came to the emergency department for complaints of vomiting, fever, and diarrhea. During the next two days, we canceled all planned surgical operations. At the second day, we followed 80 patients and third day 150 patients came to our emergency services. Our emergency services and ıntensive care units were blocked because of personnel illness. We examined all patients, got blood tests and stool stains and cultures. Because of this mass casualty contamination, our infection control committee gave formal information that suspicious of Salmonellosis. 13 of 310 infected health personnel were hospitalized. They got intravenous saline and electrolytes support like calcium and potassium. After two days we got Results of stool cultures, there was inoculation of Salmonella types. None of them died.
We realized that we are not ready for mass casualty incidents like this contamination. Because our patient flow was really blocked. We had to call in new doctors and nurses from different hospital staffs. The event was similar to bioterrorism conditions and we suddenly have to put in place hospital disaster plans at the beginning of decontamination. This situation made us to recognize bioterrorism agents like Salmonella types. We have to raise awareness of the community about chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear agents attacks.
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- © World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine 2019