A Case of Food Poisoning in Man Probably Caused by the Consumption of a Duck Egg * *This article also appeared in Monthly Bulletin of the Ministry of Health and Emergency Public Health Laboratory Service (1945), 4, 46.

1945 ◽  
Vol 101 (6) ◽  
pp. 131-135
Author(s):  
R.F. Gordon ◽  
A. Buxton
1981 ◽  
Vol 87 (2) ◽  
pp. 191-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. G. Mann ◽  
M. S. Pereira ◽  
J. W. G. Smith ◽  
R. J. C. Hart ◽  
W. O. Williams ◽  
...  

SummaryA five year collaborative study of influenza in volunteer families from 1973–78 covered a period in which there were outbreaks every year but no major epidemics of influenza. Volunteers over the age of 15 years were bled before and after each of the five winters, and virus isolation was attempted from as many as possible when they reported episodes of illness. Children under 15 in the volunteer families were also swabbed when they were ill. Although most families experienced one or more attacks by influenza viruses, there was little transmission within families.


2002 ◽  
Vol 6 (45) ◽  
Author(s):  
S O’Brien ◽  
L Ward

Although Salmonella Enteritidis phage type (PT) 4, responsible for the major epidemic during the late 1980s and early 1990s (1), has continued to decline, there have been increases in a number of the more unusual phage types of S. Enteritidis (2). Isolates of S. Enteritidis PT 3, 6a, 13a and 14b and 21 confirmed by the Public Health Laboratory Service Laboratory of Enteric Pathogens (PHLS LEP) in England have all increased during 2002 (table 1) (3).


1964 ◽  
Vol 62 (3) ◽  
pp. 283-302 ◽  
Author(s):  

In 1961 and 1962 a Working Party of the Public Health Laboratory Service, in which twenty-two laboratories participated, investigated the occurrence of salmonellae in abattoirs, meat factories, butchers' shops and meat products, and their association with human infections.Thirty-two abattoirs were studied. Salmonellae were isolated from 930 (21%) of 4496 swabs of abattoir drains. There was great variation between different abattoirs, but in general salmonellae were found most frequently in those which slaughtered a high proportion of cattle and a low proportion of sheep; more sero-types were isolated from bacon factories than from abattoirs which slaughtered more than one species of animal. Of 11,347 tissue specimens collected at abattoirs, 218 (1·92%) yielded salmonellae.Drain swabs from butchers' shops were examined and 73 (6·5%) of 1117 swabs were positive. Meat and meat products were less commonly contaminated but 0·8% of 4127 samples yielded salmonellae.Salmonella typhimurium was the serotype isolated most frequently from all sources. It was often shown that the same serotypes or phage-types were occurring in abattoirs and in human cases in an area at the same time. In eight food-poisoning incidents, involving a total of 281 cases and excreters, there was convincing evidence that meat or a meat product was the vehicle of infection; in a further twenty-three incidents the organisms causing disease were isolated from sources which suggested that infection might have been meat-borne.The evidence collected suggests that cattle introduce salmonellae into abattoirs more often than other species of animals. The importance of pigs as a source of human infection is confirmed. Sheep are not a source of salmonella infection in man from meat and meat products, whereas meat from pigs, cattle and calves is a source of infection and is responsible for both sporadic cases and outbreaks of disease.We wish to thank the many medical officers of health who co-operated in this study. The public health inspectors and abattoir staffs who collected the specimens are too numerous to mention by name, but their invaluable assistance is most gratefully acknowledged. Among the medical officers who assisted us in the survey were: Dr A. Armit (Bridport M.B. and R.D.), Prof. D. B. Bradshaw (Leeds C.B.), Dr C. B. Crane (York C.B.), Dr J. Douglas (Bradford C.B.), Dr A. B. R. Finn (Guildford M.B.), Dr R. A. Good (Winchester M.B.), Dr G. B. Hopkins (Wimborne and Cranborne R.D.), Dr E. W. Kinsey (Caernarvon M.B.), Dr I. B. Lawrence (Dorchester M.B. and R.D.), Dr R. A. Leader (Ipswich C.B.), Dr Mary Lennox (Barry M.B.), Dr V. P. McDonagh (Keighley M.B.), Dr H. E. Nutten (Beccles M.B.), Dr G. O'Donnell (Worcester C.B.), Dr E. J. O'Keeffe (Wareham M.B. and Wareham and Purbeck R.D.), Dr N. F. Pearson (Sturminster Newton R.D.), Dr W. P. Phillips (Cardiff C.B.), Dr T. H. Pierce (Llandudno U.D.), Dr J. L. Rennie (Carlisle C.B.), Dr C. L. Sharp (Bedford M.B.), Dr E. F. Shennan (Evesham U.D.), Dr J. Stevenson-Logan (Southend-on-Sea C.B.), Dr D. W. Wauchob (Blackpool C.B.), Dr J. Walker (Lancashire C.C.), Dr J. V. Walker (Darlington C.B.), Dr R. B. Walker (Kingsbridge R.D.), Dr E. J. Gordon Wallace (Weymouth M.B.), Dr C. Robertson Wilson (Lancashire C.C.), Dr E. M. Wright (Salisbury M.B.), Dr Alfred Yarrow (South East Essex).


BMJ ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 296 (6618) ◽  
pp. 361-361
Author(s):  
B Greatorex

1990 ◽  
Vol 104 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. McIntyre ◽  
J. B. Kurtz ◽  
J. B. Selkon

SUMMARYSera from 252 patients with community-acquired pneumonia were examined for the presence of antibodies to 15 antigens of 7Legionellaspp. by indirect immunofluorescent antibody testing. The sera had been collected as part of the British Thoracic Society/Public Health Laboratory Service study of community-acquired pneumonia in adults. We also examined sera from 20 patients with gram-negative sepsis.


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