Tag Archives: PHE

UK – Norovirus Outbreaks in November

Outbreak News Today  Eurofins

From the week beginning Nov. 3 through the week beginning Nov. 24, Public Health England (PHE) reported 56 suspected and laboratory confirmed hospital norovirus outbreaks with the West Midlands and North East regions/PHE center accounting for the most with 16 and 15 outbreaks, respectively.

Forty-seven, or 84 percent of the outbreaks led to ward/bay closures or restriction to admissions. Three quarters were laboratory confirmed.

This brings the annual total to 572 hospital norovirus outbreaks through the week of Nov.24

 

UK – E.coli O55 Cluster

BBC News  Ecoli Istock

Nursery children are among several people who have been infected with a “very rare” E. coli strain that led to kidney problems in some patients.

Ten people in the Blandford area of Dorset have been diagnosed with the bacterial illness since July, Public Health England (PHE) said.

Those affected include children at Blandford Children’s Centre Nursery.

PHE said the “cluster of illnesses” involved the O55 strain, not identified in England since records began in 1994.

Seven of those affected developed the kidney problems, but there have been no deaths, PHE confirmed.

Heart 102.3

An outbreak of E. coli’s being investigated in Dorset – with some cases connected to a children’s nursery.

Public Health England (PHE) is leading on the investigation in the Blandford area of this cluster of illnesses caused by a rare strain of the bacteria called Verocytotoxin-producing Escherichia coli 055 (VTEC 055).
Read more at http://www.heart.co.uk/dorset/news/local/dorset-e-coli-outbreak-investigated/#1KkRGwGjtjVwLUfs.99

UK – PHE Investigation into Salmonella Outbreak

GOV.UK

Public Health England (PHE) is investigating a national outbreak of a type of Salmonella Enteritidis which has affected 156 people.

To date, 55 cases have seen in Hampshire, 25 in London, 33 in Cheshire and Merseyside, and 43 in the West Midlands. Cases have also been seen in Austria and France.

In England, the cases occurred as isolated clusters over several months and have been managed locally, but are now being reassessed as potentially linked under a national investigation.

Dr Paul Cleary, a consultant epidemiologist leading the PHE investigation, said:

We are working with our colleagues across PHE, the Food Standards Agency, in local authorities and with other public health organisations in Europe to investigate the cause of this outbreak.

We are making good progress and hope to have more conclusive evidence shortly. We will continue to monitor the situation and if there is any further public health action necessary then we will ensure that this takes place.

Testing using genetic typing methods has revealed that all of the cases are infected with closely related strains, indicating that the cause of the illness is from a single source. Some food and environmental samples from catering outlets have tested positive for Salmonella with the same genetic profile as seen in the outbreak cases.

Salmonella Enteritidis is a strain of bacteria that causes gastrointestinal illness and is often associated with poultry or eggs. Symptoms include diarrhoea, stomach cramps and sometimes vomiting and fever. Symptoms are self-limiting and most people recover without treatment although it is important to remain hydrated.

UK – Baby Formula – Bacillus cereus – Liquid Food Linked to Poisoning of Babies was Sent to 22 Hospitals

The Guardian Bacillus_cereus_01

Paul Cosford, the head of Public Health England (PHE), said an urgent recall had been ordered after a contaminated batch of the food was suspected of causing the septicaemia that killed a baby at a neonatal intensive care unit at London’s Guy’s and St Thomas’ hospital.

Another 14 premature babies in six separate hospitals in London and the south-east all suffered food poisoning after receiving drips containing a batch of liquid feed from a specialist company based in north-west London, ITH Pharma Limited. They are responding to antibiotics but are described as poorly by PHE.

The emergency developed rapidly over the weekend with one baby after another falling ill, triggering a frantic search to identify the source of the bacteria causing the life-threatening septicaemia.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Thursday, Cosford said the feed was the “most likely cause” of the infection and that an urgent investigation was under way into what went wrong. The feed was infected with a bacterium known as Bacillus cereus, PHE said.

The Telegraph

One baby has died while 14 others were left fighting for their lives with blood poisoning after being given the liquid feed in NHS neonatal care units at six different hospitals.

A public health alert was issued by health chiefs on Wednesday evening after it emerged all the newborns’ had been given a nutrition drip manufactured by London-based ITH Pharma Ltd.

Medical regulators are investigating an incident which occurred last Thursday at the company’s London manufacturing plant.