Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Volume 104, Issue 1 , Pages 66-69, January 2010

A hepatitis E outbreak caused by a temporary interruption in a municipal water treatment system, Baripada, Orissa, India, 2004

  • Susanta K. Swain

      Affiliations

    • Field Epidemiology Training Programme, Master of Applied Epidemiology, National Institute of Epidemiology, Indian Council of Medical Research, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
  • ,
  • Prameela Baral

      Affiliations

    • Regional Public Heath Laboratory, District Hospital, Baripada, Mayurbhanj, Orissa, India
  • ,
  • Yvan J. Hutin

      Affiliations

    • WHO India Country Office, New Delhi, India
  • ,
  • T. Venkat Rao

      Affiliations

    • Field Epidemiology Training Programme, Master of Applied Epidemiology, National Institute of Epidemiology, Indian Council of Medical Research, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
  • ,
  • Manoj Murhekar

      Affiliations

    • Field Epidemiology Training Programme, Master of Applied Epidemiology, National Institute of Epidemiology, Indian Council of Medical Research, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author.
  • ,
  • Mohan D. Gupte

      Affiliations

    • Field Epidemiology Training Programme, Master of Applied Epidemiology, National Institute of Epidemiology, Indian Council of Medical Research, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India

Received 26 May 2009; received in revised form 2 July 2009; accepted 2 July 2009.

Summary 

In January 2004, we investigated a cluster of acute hepatitis in Baripada, Orissa, India. Between January and March 2004, 538 cases (definition: fever with loss of appetite and jaundice) were reported (attack rate: 263 per 100 000, 5 deaths, case fatality rate: 0.93%). Forty-seven of 48 sera were positive for IgM antibodies to hepatitis E virus. Cases peaked in February 2004 and decreased rapidly, suggesting a common source outbreak. Five neighbourhoods supplied by a common water supply were most affected. Ninety-one percent of the 538 cases and 30% of 538 unaffected controls reported drinking water from one source (odds ratio 31, 95% CI 27–48). The neighbourhood's water was pumped directly from a river and had not been treated during a 10-day period in early January (1 month before the peak of the outbreak) because of a strike at the treatment plant. This large hepatitis E outbreak was associated with drinking untreated raw river water. Measures must be in place to check the quality of municipal water and to ensure essential services in case of strikes.

Keywords: Viral hepatitis, Hepatitis E, Outbreak, Water supply, Waterborne diseases, India

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PII: S0035-9203(09)00257-0

doi:10.1016/j.trstmh.2009.07.020

Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Volume 104, Issue 1 , Pages 66-69, January 2010