PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Shigellosis outbreak associated with contaminated well water in a rural elementary school: Sichuan Province, China, June 7-16, 2009.

  • Fan He,
  • Ke Han,
  • Lunguang Liu,
  • Wei Sun,
  • Lijie Zhang,
  • Baoping Zhu,
  • Huilai Ma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0047239
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 10
p. e47239

Abstract

Read online

OBJECTIVES: We investigated a shigellosis outbreak in an elementary school to identify the source of infection, mode of transmission and risk factors for illness. METHODS: In a case-control investigation, we compared the source of drinking water, consumption of untreated well water and suspected food items, and hygienic habits between case-students and randomly selected asymptomatic control-students, frequency-matched by class on a 1:1 ratio. RESULTS: 18% of the 533 students and no teachers developed Shigella. 52%(44/85) of case-students and 17% (12/71) of control-students drank untreated well water (OR = 2.3, 95% CI = 1.1-5.8); 47% (n = 40/85) of case-students and 14% (10/71) of control-students drank untreated water from Well A (OR = 3.7, 95% CI = 1.3-11). The odds ratio increased with the amount of untreated Well A water consumed (p = 0.035, χ(2) test for trend). Rectal swabs from 5 of 6 case-students and water from Well A yielded Shigella flexneri 2b. CONCLUSIONS: This shigellosis outbreak was caused by drinking untreated water from a well polluted by Shigella flexneri 2b.