Outbreak of acute diarrhoeal disease attributed to consumption of faecal contaminated water supplied through damaged pipelines in Thiruper, Tiruvallur district, Tamil Nadu, India, 2016
Background: On December 24, 2016, 18 Acute Diarrhoeal Disease (ADD) cases were reported in Thiruper village. We aimed to identify potential exposure and propose recommendations. Methods: We defined a case of ADD as occurrence loose stools (≥3 episodes), December 14–30, 2016. We did door-to-door case...
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doaj-2342da998da344d0b00e1aef48e03b2d2021-10-03T04:40:37ZengElsevierClinical Epidemiology and Global Health2213-39842021-04-0110100701Outbreak of acute diarrhoeal disease attributed to consumption of faecal contaminated water supplied through damaged pipelines in Thiruper, Tiruvallur district, Tamil Nadu, India, 2016Mohan Anandan0Saraswathi VS1Polani Rubeshkumar2Manickam Ponnaiah3Prabhakaran Jesudoss4Kolandaswamy Karumanagounder5Manoj Murhekar6ICMR-National Institute of Epidemiology, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India; Directorate of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Tamil Nadu, IndiaICMR-National Institute of Epidemiology, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India; Directorate of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Tamil Nadu, IndiaICMR-National Institute of Epidemiology, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, IndiaICMR-National Institute of Epidemiology, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India; Corresponding author. Scientist-E & Faculty, ICMR-National Institute of Epidemiology, R127, Second main road, TNHB, Ayapakkam, Chennai, 600077, India.Directorate of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Tamil Nadu, IndiaDirectorate of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Tamil Nadu, IndiaICMR-National Institute of Epidemiology, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, IndiaBackground: On December 24, 2016, 18 Acute Diarrhoeal Disease (ADD) cases were reported in Thiruper village. We aimed to identify potential exposure and propose recommendations. Methods: We defined a case of ADD as occurrence loose stools (≥3 episodes), December 14–30, 2016. We did door-to-door case search, calculated attack rate by age and gender, drew epidemic curve and plotted cases by residence. We conducted a matched case-control study and computed Matched Odds ratio (MOR), 95% confidence interval (95% CI) and Population Attributable Risk (PAR). We collected stool and water specimens for laboratory testing. Results: We identified 38 (6%) cases among 625 residents. The attack rate of ADD was higher among aged <5 years (16.5%), and female (6.8%). The outbreak lasted between 14–27 December 2016 with multiple peaks. Cases clustered in areas receiving water from damaged pipelines crossing open-defecation area. We compared 38 ADD cases with 76 age, gender and neighbourhood matched controls for different exposures. Consuming water supplied through the damaged subterranean pipeline (MOR = 3.7; 95% CI = 1.1 to 16.4; PAR = 72%) was associated with ADD. The environmental investigation pointed out potential faecal contamination of water through damaged subterranean pipelines near open-air defaecation area of village. The collected stool specimens were negative for pathogens, and water specimens tested positive for Escherichia coli. Conclusions: We confirmed that the outbreak of ADD in Thiruper village was due to consumption of water contaminated with E. coli supplied through damaged subterranean pipelines post-cyclone. We recommended the replacement of subterranean pipelines and distribution of chlorinated water.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213398421000051OutbreakAcute diarrhoeal diseaseMatched case-control studyWaterborne diseaseIndia |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Mohan Anandan Saraswathi VS Polani Rubeshkumar Manickam Ponnaiah Prabhakaran Jesudoss Kolandaswamy Karumanagounder Manoj Murhekar |
spellingShingle |
Mohan Anandan Saraswathi VS Polani Rubeshkumar Manickam Ponnaiah Prabhakaran Jesudoss Kolandaswamy Karumanagounder Manoj Murhekar Outbreak of acute diarrhoeal disease attributed to consumption of faecal contaminated water supplied through damaged pipelines in Thiruper, Tiruvallur district, Tamil Nadu, India, 2016 Clinical Epidemiology and Global Health Outbreak Acute diarrhoeal disease Matched case-control study Waterborne disease India |
author_facet |
Mohan Anandan Saraswathi VS Polani Rubeshkumar Manickam Ponnaiah Prabhakaran Jesudoss Kolandaswamy Karumanagounder Manoj Murhekar |
author_sort |
Mohan Anandan |
title |
Outbreak of acute diarrhoeal disease attributed to consumption of faecal contaminated water supplied through damaged pipelines in Thiruper, Tiruvallur district, Tamil Nadu, India, 2016 |
title_short |
Outbreak of acute diarrhoeal disease attributed to consumption of faecal contaminated water supplied through damaged pipelines in Thiruper, Tiruvallur district, Tamil Nadu, India, 2016 |
title_full |
Outbreak of acute diarrhoeal disease attributed to consumption of faecal contaminated water supplied through damaged pipelines in Thiruper, Tiruvallur district, Tamil Nadu, India, 2016 |
title_fullStr |
Outbreak of acute diarrhoeal disease attributed to consumption of faecal contaminated water supplied through damaged pipelines in Thiruper, Tiruvallur district, Tamil Nadu, India, 2016 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Outbreak of acute diarrhoeal disease attributed to consumption of faecal contaminated water supplied through damaged pipelines in Thiruper, Tiruvallur district, Tamil Nadu, India, 2016 |
title_sort |
outbreak of acute diarrhoeal disease attributed to consumption of faecal contaminated water supplied through damaged pipelines in thiruper, tiruvallur district, tamil nadu, india, 2016 |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Clinical Epidemiology and Global Health |
issn |
2213-3984 |
publishDate |
2021-04-01 |
description |
Background: On December 24, 2016, 18 Acute Diarrhoeal Disease (ADD) cases were reported in Thiruper village. We aimed to identify potential exposure and propose recommendations. Methods: We defined a case of ADD as occurrence loose stools (≥3 episodes), December 14–30, 2016. We did door-to-door case search, calculated attack rate by age and gender, drew epidemic curve and plotted cases by residence. We conducted a matched case-control study and computed Matched Odds ratio (MOR), 95% confidence interval (95% CI) and Population Attributable Risk (PAR). We collected stool and water specimens for laboratory testing. Results: We identified 38 (6%) cases among 625 residents. The attack rate of ADD was higher among aged <5 years (16.5%), and female (6.8%). The outbreak lasted between 14–27 December 2016 with multiple peaks. Cases clustered in areas receiving water from damaged pipelines crossing open-defecation area. We compared 38 ADD cases with 76 age, gender and neighbourhood matched controls for different exposures. Consuming water supplied through the damaged subterranean pipeline (MOR = 3.7; 95% CI = 1.1 to 16.4; PAR = 72%) was associated with ADD. The environmental investigation pointed out potential faecal contamination of water through damaged subterranean pipelines near open-air defaecation area of village. The collected stool specimens were negative for pathogens, and water specimens tested positive for Escherichia coli. Conclusions: We confirmed that the outbreak of ADD in Thiruper village was due to consumption of water contaminated with E. coli supplied through damaged subterranean pipelines post-cyclone. We recommended the replacement of subterranean pipelines and distribution of chlorinated water. |
topic |
Outbreak Acute diarrhoeal disease Matched case-control study Waterborne disease India |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213398421000051 |
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