Title | Two outbreaks of severe respiratory disease in nursing homes associated with rhinovirus. | ||
Author | Hicks, Lauri A; Shepard, Colin W; Britz, Phyllis H; Erdman, Dean D; Fischer, Marc; Flannery, Brendan L; Peck, Angela J; Lu, Xiaoyan; Thacker, W Lanier; Benson, Robert F; Tondella, Maria L; Moll, Maria E; Whitney, Cynthia G; Anderson, Larry J; Feikin, Daniel R | ||
Journal | J Am Geriatr Soc | Publication Year/Month | 2006-Feb |
PMID | 16460380 | PMCID | -N/A- |
Affiliation | 1.Respiratory Diseases Branch, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Epidemic Intelligence Service, Office of Workforce and Career Development, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA. lauriahicks@yahoo.com. |
OBJECTIVES: To characterize illness and identify the etiology for two nursing home outbreaks of respiratory illness. DESIGN: Multisite outbreak investigations; cohort. SETTING: Two nursing homes in Pennsylvania. PARTICIPANTS: Facility A residents (n = 170), Facility B residents (n = 124), and employees (n = 91). MEASUREMENTS: Medical records for Facility A and B residents were reviewed, and employees from Facility B self-administered a questionnaire to identify risk factors for illness. Serological, oropharyngeal, and nasopharyngeal specimens were collected for both outbreaks, and testing for respiratory pathogens was performed. RESULTS: In Facility A, 40 (24%) of 170 residents were identified with respiratory illness; 13 (33%) case-patients had radiographically confirmed pneumonia, 15 (38%) were taken to a hospital, and two (5%) died. Of 10 specimens collected from symptomatic Facility A case-patients, four (40%) tested positive using reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction for rhinovirus. In Facility B, 77 (62%) of 124 residents had respiratory illness, and 40 (52%) had radiographically confirmed pneumonia; 12 (16%) case-patients were hospitalized, and five (6%) died. Of 19 respiratory specimens collected from symptomatic Facility B case-patients, six (32%) were positive for rhinovirus; one was from an employee. Five (50%) of 10 rhinovirus-positive cases in both outbreaks had clinical and radiographic evidence of pneumonia. CONCLUSION: These investigations suggest that rhinoviruses may be an underrecognized cause of respiratory outbreaks in nursing homes, capable of causing pneumonia and perhaps death.