Last data update: Apr 14, 2025. (Total: 49082 publications since 2009)
Records 1-2 (of 2 Records) |
Query Trace: Rokisky JJr[original query] |
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Keep your water safe with resources from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Curtiss E , Hils J , Rokisky JJr . J Environ Health 2022 84 (10) 42-43 People in the U.S. have access to some | of the safest public drinking water supplies in the world (Centers for Disease | Control and Prevention [CDC], 2021a). Environmental health professionals are one of | the key groups that help make drinking water safe. They also help make water safe for | communities that depend on private wells, | residents in buildings with complex water systems, and swimmers who exercise regularly in | pools. The Water, Food, and Environmental | Health Services Branch (WFEHSB) within the | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | (CDC) supports environmental health professionals with tools and resources to strengthen | safe water for community health (Table 1) |
Outbreaks of acute gastrointestinal illness associated with a splash pad in a Wildlife Park - Kansas, June 2021
Aluko SK , Ishrati SS , Walker DC , Mattioli MC , Kahler AM , Vanden Esschert KL , Hervey K , Rokisky JJr , Wikswo ME , Laco JP , Kurlekar S , Byrne A , Molinari NA , Gleason ME , Steward C , Hlavsa MC , Neises D . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2022 71 (31) 981-987 In June 2021, Kansas state and county public health officials identified and investigated three cases of shigellosis (a bacterial diarrheal illness caused by Shigella spp.) associated with visiting a wildlife park. The park has animal exhibits and a splash pad. Two affected persons visited animal exhibits, and all three entered the splash pad. Nonhuman primates are the only known animal reservoir of Shigella. The splash pad, which sprays water on users and is designed so that water does not collect in the user area, was closed on June 19. The state and county public health codes do not include regulations for splash pads. Thus, these venues are not typically inspected, and environmental health expertise is limited. A case-control study identified two distinct outbreaks associated with the park (a shigellosis outbreak involving 21 cases and a subsequent norovirus infection outbreak involving six cases). Shigella and norovirus can be transmitted by contaminated water; in both outbreaks, illness was associated with getting splash pad water in the mouth (multiply imputed adjusted odds ratio [aOR(MI)] = 6.4, p = 0.036; and 28.6, p = 0.006, respectively). Maintaining adequate water disinfection and environmental health expertise and targeting prevention efforts to caregivers of splash pad users help prevent splash pad-associated outbreaks. Outbreak incidence might be further reduced when U.S. jurisdicitons voluntarily adopt CDC's Model Aquatic Health Code (MAHC) recommendations and through the prevention messages: "Don't get in the water if sick with diarrhea," "Don't stand or sit above the jets," and "Don't swallow the water."(†). |
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