Emerging Infectious Diseases (Apr 2004)

Coccidioidomycosis among Workers at an Archeological Site, Northeastern Utah

  • Lyle R. Petersen,
  • Stacie L. Marshall,
  • Christine Barton,
  • Rana A. Hajjeh,
  • Mark D. Lindsley,
  • David W. Warnock,
  • Anil A. Panackal,
  • Joseph B. Shaffer,
  • Maryam B. Haddad,
  • Frederick S. Fisher,
  • David T. Dennis,
  • Juliette Morgan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1004.030446
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
pp. 637 – 642

Abstract

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In 2001, an outbreak of acute respiratory disease occurred among persons working at a Native American archeological site at Dinosaur National Monument in northeastern Utah. Epidemiologic and environmental investigations were undertaken to determine the cause of the outbreak. A clinical case was defined by the presence of at least two of the following symptoms: self-reported fever, shortness of breath, or cough. Ten workers met the clinical case definition; 9 had serologic confirmation of coccidioidomycosis, and 8 were hospitalized. All 10 were present during sifting of dirt through screens on June 19; symptoms began 9–12 days later (median 10). Coccidioidomycosis also developed in a worker at the site in September 2001. A serosurvey among 40 other Dinosaur National Monument workers did not find serologic evidence of recent infection. This outbreak documents a new endemic focus of coccidioidomycosis, extending northward its known geographic distribution in Utah by approximately 200 miles.

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