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Outbreak of norovirus infection associated with contaminated flood water, Salzburg, 2005
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2005
Year
Virus EpidemiologyDisease OutbreakIll TouristsVirus TransmissionTraveler DiarrheaAmerican TouristsEnvironmental HealthClinical EpidemiologyGastrointestinal VirusFood ControlEmerging Infectious DiseaseInfection ControlPublic HealthContaminated Flood WaterInfectious Disease EpidemiologyFoodborne PathogensVirologyWaterborne DiseasesWater QualityFoodborne HazardEpidemiologyFood SafetyRaw SewageFoodborne IllnessMicrobiologyMedicineNorovirus Infection
An outbreak of gastrointestinal illness in American tourists in May-June 2005 that was first thought to be foodborne has been linked to direct exposure to floodwater contaminated with raw sewage. On 1 June 2005, ORF (the Austrian Broadcasting Company) reported that 26 out of 36 American tourists who had eaten dinner in a well-known restaurant in Salzburg had fallen ill. According to the news report, 10 of the ill tourists had presented to a local hospital, triggering an outbreak investigaton by the local health authorities, who assumed salmonella to be the causative agent.