Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T04:56:43.606Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

An outbreak of water-borne typhoid investigated by bacteriophage typing and ‘selective’ sewage examination

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

P. G. H. Gell
Affiliation:
Fromthe Central Emergency Public Health Laboratory, Cardiff
Betty C. Hobbs
Affiliation:
Fromthe Central Emergency Public Health Laboratory, Cardiff
V. D. Allison
Affiliation:
The Cardiff andCounty Public Health Laboratory
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

1. By means of phage typing of Bact. typhosum, the source of infection in a boy who drank water from a polluted stream was traced backwards via water, sewage effluent, crude sewage and faecal specimens to unsuspected typhoid carriers in a large institution.

2. A nurse in the institution contracted typhoid fever, caused by the same phage type (C) of Bact. typhosum as was found (a) in the stools of typhoid carriers in the wards in which she was on duty, (b) in the crude sewage and sewage effluent from the institution, (c) in the stream into which the sewage effluent discharged, and (d) in the stools of the boy who drank the stream water. The nurse's sister, who had had an attack of typhoid fever a few months earlier, was infected with a different type (E 1) of Bact. typhosum and was therefore not the source of her sister's infection.

3.The laboratory technique is described for the examination of (a) samples of water, sewage effluent and crude sewage, using different selective and enrichment media, (b) large numbers of faecal specimens for enteric organisms by a preliminary pooling of specimens in batches of six or seven, and further examination of the individual specimens comprising a positive batch, thus effecting a saving of time and economy of media.

We wish to thank the Medical Officers of Health, sanitary inspector and the medical and nursing staff of the institution for their enthusiastic co-operation in the investigation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1945

References

REFERENCES

Bradley, W. H. (1943). Lancet, 1, 438.Google Scholar
Craigie, J. & Yen, C. H. (1938 a). canad. Publ. Hlth J. 29, 448.Google Scholar
Craigie, J. & Yen, C. H. (1938 b). canad. Publ. Hlth J. 29, 484.Google Scholar
Felix, A. (1943). Lancet, 1, 435.Google Scholar
Hobbs, B. C. (1943). Monthly Bull. E.P.H.L.S. 03 1943, p. 29.Google Scholar
Hobbs, B. C. & Allison, V. D. (1945 a). Monthly Bull. E.P.H.L.S., 4, 12.Google Scholar
Hobbs, B. C. & Allison, V. D. (1945 b). Monthly Bull. E.P.H.L.S., (in the Press).Google Scholar
Hobbs, B. C., King, G. J. G. & Allison, V. D. (1945). Monthly Bull. E.P.H.L.S., (in the Press).Google Scholar
Hynes, M. (1942). J. Path. Bact. 54, 193.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, E. R. (1936). J. Path. Bact. 42, 455.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, G. J. G. (1944). Monthly Bull. E.P.H.L.S. 3, 84.Google Scholar
Knox, R., Gell, P. G. H. & Pollock, M. R. (1942). J. Path. Bact. 54, 469.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knox, R., Gell, P. G. H. & Pollock, M. R. (1943). J. Hyg., Camb., 43, 147.Google Scholar
Leifson, E. (1935). J. Path. Bact. 49, 581.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruys, A. C. (1940). Brit. Med. J. 1, 606.Google Scholar
Wilson, W. J. & Blair, E. M. McV. (1931). J. Hyg., Camb., 31, 138.Google Scholar
Wilson, W. J. & Blair, E. M. McV. (1938). J. Hyg., Camb., 38, 507.Google Scholar