Emerging Infectious Diseases (Feb 2001)

Gastroenteritis in Sentinel General Practices, the Netherlands

  • Matty A.S. de Wit,
  • Marion P.G. Koopmans,
  • Laetitia M. Kortbeek,
  • Nan J. van Leeuwen,
  • AAD I.M. Bartelds,
  • Yvonne T.H.P. van Duynhoven

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid0701.700082
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 82 – 91

Abstract

Read online

From 1996 to 1999, the incidence of gastroenteritis in general practices and the role of a broad range of pathogens in the Netherlands were studied. All patients with gastroenteritis who had visited a general practitioner were reported. All patients who had visited a general practitioner for gastroenteritis (cases) and an equal number of patients visiting for nongastrointestinal symptoms (controls) were invited to participate in a case-control study. The incidence of gastroenteritis was 79.7 per 10,000 person years. Campylobacter was detected most frequently (10% of cases), followed by Giardia lamblia (5%), rotavirus (5%), Norwalk-like viruses (5%) and Salmonella (4%). Our study found that in the Netherlands (population 15.6 million), an estimated 128,000 persons each year consult their general practitioner for gastroenteritis, slightly less than in a comparable study in 1992 to 1993. A pathogen could be detected in almost 40% of patients (bacteria 16%, viruses 15%, parasites 8%).

Keywords