Stool specimen collection during a foodborne or enteric illness outbreak investigation is essential for determining the outbreak etiology and for advancing the epidemiologic understanding of the pathogens and food vehicles causing illness. However, public health professionals face multifaceted barriers when trying to collect stool specimens from ill person during an outbreak investigation. The Colorado Integrated Food Safety Center of Excellence (Colorado IFS CoE) and the Arizona Department of Health Services surveyed local public health agencies (LPHAs) to identify barriers to collecting ≥ 2 clinical specimens in foodborne and enteric illness outbreaks. The most commonly selected patient-related barrier was that the patient did not think it is important to provide a stool sample because they are well by the time the LPHA follows-up (61%). The most frequently selected outbreak-related barrier was the LPHA did not learn about the outbreak until after symptoms had resolved (61%). Time/personnel not being available for stool...
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Journal Article|
February 23 2023
Barriers to stool specimen collection during foodborne and enteric illness outbreak investigations in Arizona and Colorado.
Department of Epidemiology, Colorado School of Public Health 13001 East 17th Place, Fitzsimons Building, 3rd Floor, E3360, Mail Stop B119, Aurora, CO 80045, USA. E-mail michelle.torok@cuanschutz.edu
Journal: Journal of Food Protection
Citation: Journal of Food Protection (2023) 86 (1)
DOI: 10.1016/j.jfp.2022.11.004
Published: 2023
Citation
Torok, M., White, A., Butterfield, M., Weiss, J., Walter, E. S., Hewitson, I., Jervis, R.; Barriers to stool specimen collection during foodborne and enteric illness outbreak investigations in Arizona and Colorado.. IFIS Food and Health Sciences Database 2023; doi:
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