2019
DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciz584
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Sources of Airborne Norovirus in Hospital Outbreaks

Abstract: Background Noroviruses are the major cause of viral gastroenteritis. Disease transmission is difficult to prevent and outbreaks in health-care facilities commonly occur. Contact with infected persons and contaminated environments are believed to be the main routes of transmission. However, noroviruses have recently been found in aerosols and airborne transmission has been suggested. The aim of our study was to investigate associations between symptoms of gastroenteritis and the presence of ai… Show more

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Cited by 60 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…People with gastrointestinal viruses such as norovirus [71] can deposit viruses onto fomites such as food, phones, tables, and doorknobs via unclean hands or vomiting, and others can then become infected by hand-to-mouth transfer of the viruses. Some research suggests that noroviruses also may spread by droplets produced during vomiting and the flushing of toilets; these droplets can then settle onto nearby surfaces or possibly be inhaled [72]. Most viruses are spread by multiple routes, and viral disease transmission can be difficult to trace.…”
Section: Transmission Of Virusesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…People with gastrointestinal viruses such as norovirus [71] can deposit viruses onto fomites such as food, phones, tables, and doorknobs via unclean hands or vomiting, and others can then become infected by hand-to-mouth transfer of the viruses. Some research suggests that noroviruses also may spread by droplets produced during vomiting and the flushing of toilets; these droplets can then settle onto nearby surfaces or possibly be inhaled [72]. Most viruses are spread by multiple routes, and viral disease transmission can be difficult to trace.…”
Section: Transmission Of Virusesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Positive pressure ventilation present in HSCT units but not standard hospital floors may also play a role in environmental contamination in this population by distributing aerosols outside a patient's room. 14 These results highlight the importance of early recognition and diagnosis of norovirus in the HSCT population, given the potential for rapid and sustained spread of norovirus long after the index patient has been discharged.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…The Coriolis has been used in a variety of air-sampling applications, including collection of chemical compounds (Caygill et al, 2013), toxins (Viegas et al, 2012) and microbial contaminants in the food industry (Verreault et al, 2011; Viegas et al, 2014). It has also been used for surveillance of airborne pathogens in healthcare facilities (Le Gal et al, 2015; Montagna et al, 2017; Alsved et al, 2019; Montagna et al, 2019). It is known that during sampling the collecting cone loses a considerable amount of liquid, raising the possibility of inner contamination of the device and that longer sampling intervals may incur unintentional re-aerosolization and exposure of the microorganisms sampled for analysis, a situation of especial concern in the latter cases.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%