Cruise-Ship Bug Blamed For Olive Garden Gastro Sickness
- Wednesday, December 20, 2006, 12:57
- GastroIntestinal, Infectious Diseases, Public Health
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A highly contagious virus commonly found on cruise ships probably caused the gastroenteritis outbreak reported last week that affected 370 people who ate at an Olive Garden Italian restaurant in Indianapolis.
The cause of the infection is thought to be a norovirus, described by health officials as “highly contagious”. Norovirus is common in enclosed places with lots of people such as nursing homes, cruise ships and hospitals.
The virus was found in stool samples from three restaurant employees and a customer.
Health officials and Olive Garden managers are trying to find out how the virus got into the food. The restaurant has been thoroughly cleaned and disinfected.
Norovirus, until recently known as Norwalk-Like Virus (NLV), is the most common cause of non-bacterial gastrointestinal infections in the USA. Because viruses are much smaller than bacteria, it was only when electron microscopes arrived in the lab in the 1970s that health officials could properly investigate virus-based infections.
The gastroenteritis outbreak that gave the virus its former name occurred in 1968 in a school in Norwalk, Ohio. It was four years later discovered to have been virus-based, thanks to saved stool specimens of the children infected.
Symptoms of infection by norovirus include stomach pain, diarrhea, vomiting, and feeling weak or lethargic.
Neglecting to wash hands and to clean and disinfect kitchens and restrooms frequently and thoroughly are among the reasons that outbreaks like this occur, and Olive Garden’s management are said to be reviewing hygiene procedures at their restaurants.
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