2005
DOI: 10.3201/eid1110.050298
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Gastroenteritis Outbreak in British Troops, Iraq

Abstract: Gastroenteritis affected many British military personnel during the war in Iraq. In the first month, 1,340 cases were seen; 73% of patients required hospital admission and 36% were hospital staff. In a survey of 500 hospital staff, 76% reported gastroenteritis, which was more likely in clinical workers. Investigations showed only caliciviruses.

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Cited by 34 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…Gastroenteritis has always been a scourge on military campaigns [1], but recent experience suggests that the usual bacterial causes are being overtaken by viruses [2][3][4]. Norovirus is now a major cause of gastroenteritis outbreaks in military populations [5] and other semi-closed communities such as hospitals, hotels, cruise ships, nurseries and nursing homes [6].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gastroenteritis has always been a scourge on military campaigns [1], but recent experience suggests that the usual bacterial causes are being overtaken by viruses [2][3][4]. Norovirus is now a major cause of gastroenteritis outbreaks in military populations [5] and other semi-closed communities such as hospitals, hotels, cruise ships, nurseries and nursing homes [6].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This may have been true for established military operations with good facilities in areas where exotic, emerging or re-emerging infections did not occur. However, during operations in Sierra Leone (1999–2002), there were outbreaks of malaria47 and intestinal helminths;48 in Iraq (2003–2009), there were outbreaks of viral gastroenteritis (Figure 6)49 50 and bacterial gastroenteritis (L Lines, personal communication); and in Afghanistan (2001 onwards) there were outbreaks of viral gastroenteritis,51 bacterial gastroenteritis (E Hutley, personal communication), cutaneous leishmaniasis52 and ‘Helmand Fever’ caused by sandfly fever, acute Q fever or rickettsial infections (including typhus) 43 53. In Iraq and Afghanistan, complex trauma-related wound infections with multi-drug resistance have also occurred and these create new challenges for surgeons, medical microbiologists, infectious disease physicians and infection control practitioners 54 55.…”
Section: British Military Experiences In the 21st Centurymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although infectious and tropical diseases now rarely cause deaths in British military personnel, they can still have a serious impact on operational effectiveness and military medical resources 49 51. Infections such as Q fever and bacterial gastroenteritis can also have serious long-term sequelae that are not recognised by current data collection methods.…”
Section: British Military Experiences In the 21st Centurymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…9,10 In addition, there has been increasing attention paid to the impact of viral gastroenteritis, including norovirus, which has been shown to have an operational impact during outbreaks. 11 The short-term morbidity from diarrheal illness increases health care service use, loss of human-hours, and may cause transient critical shortages in the deployed force. Meanwhile, there have been important efforts to understand more intermediate and longterm effects of diarrheal disease in a traveler population, such as the risk of post-infectious irritable bowel syndrome and other long-term sequelae.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%