Title of article
Community outbreak of psittacosis in a rural Australian town
Author/Authors
Joanne Williams، نويسنده , , Graham Tallis، نويسنده , , Craig Dalton، نويسنده , , Sally Ng، نويسنده , , Sheila Beaton، نويسنده , , Michael Catton، نويسنده , , Julian Elliott، نويسنده , , John Carnie، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Pages
3
From page
1697
To page
1699
Abstract
Background
Health authorities in Victoria, Australia were notified of three men from a rural town with atypical pneumonia, admitted to hospital over 8 days. Initial serological testing suggested Chlamydia psittaci as the cause. We did a case-control study to find risk factors for psittacosis.
Methods
We searched for cases of pneumonia or severe flu-like illness through family physicians and the regional hospital. We selected three controls per case from the regionʹs electoral roll. We collected blood for serological tests and administered questionnaires to all cases and controls.
Findings
We found 16 cases of psittacosis and one died. Most cases were clustered within a small geographical area, with a median age of 58 years (range 23–76), 15 (94%) of whom were male. Keeping, handling, or feeding domestic or wild birds was not associated with illness. Cases spent a median of 17•5 h per week in their garden, compared with a median of 5•2 h for controls (p=0•04) and were more likely to have mowed lawns during the 3 weeks before onset of illness than controls (odds ratio 4•81 [95% Cl 1•08–33•37]).
Interpretation
We showed that psittacosis outbreaks are not limited to direct contact with birds and pose new challenges for disease control. Modifications may be needed to work outdoors to decrease the risk of psittacosis.
Journal title
The Lancet
Serial Year
1998
Journal title
The Lancet
Record number
577371
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