Background
Methods
Results
Hypothesis
Prevention
100
Which food was being studied for association?

Green Onions

100

What type of study was conducted among those who dined at restaurant A in early October?

Case- control

100

How many patients were hospitilized?

124

100

True or False: Generating a hypothesis is unnecessary if the source of an outbreak is obvious

False! (Even if the source seems obvious, a hypothesis should still be generated and tested to confirm the findings)


100

True or False: Washing vegetables with chlorinated water can completely eliminate hepatitis A contamination

False! (It reduces but does not completely eliminate contamination)

200

Where did the major outbreak from the study occur?

Pennsylvania

200

Who were the cases?

Patients who were Pennsylvania residents, who ate at Restaurant A and obtained hep A

200

How many died?

3

200

During the investigation of the hepatitis A outbreak, what was hypothesized as the primary source of contamination?

Green onions grown in Mexico

200

What public health action did the FDA take after the hepatitis A outbreak linked to green onions?

They issued an import ban on green onions from implicated farms in Mexico.

300

When did the major outbreak from the study occur?

November 2003

300

Who were the controls?

meal companions of patients

300

What disease was identified from unusual juvenile arthritis cases?

Lyme disease

300

True or False: In the hepatitis A outbreak, the INITIAL hypothesis was that the outbreak was caused by contaminated water

False! (The initial focus was on food items, specifically green onions in mild salsa)

300

What is a key step mentioned for restaurant staff to prevent cross-contamination during food preparation?

Use proper washing methods for produce and ensure preparation areas are sanitized

400

True or False: Hepatitis A virus can remain infectious on environmental surfaces for at least one month

True!

400

What other procedures were measured (article 1)?

nucleic acid sequencing, statistical analysis, assessment of employees and the environment

400

True or False: Hot salsa was associated with illness

False, only the mild salsa

400

According to Reingold, what is often the first step in investigating an outbreak?

Establishing case definitions

400

Name just one strategy written in the article about how public health officials help prevent future hepatitis A outbreaks in restaurants?

By ensuring proper food handling practices, implementing hygiene training for staff, and encouraging vaccination for at-risk individuals

500

True or False: there are > 5% cases of Hepatitis A virus in the US annually

False! 

500

What were the 4 major detection sources mentioned in the Outbreaks investigations article?

Clinicians, infection control nurses, lab workers.

Surveillance data (e.g., hepatitis B in dental patients).

Media reports (e.g., news alerts).

Public complaints (e.g., foodborne illnesses).

500

What was the median age mentioned of patients affected in the Pennsylvania hepatitis A outbreak?

34 years

500

What hypothesis testing method did the hepatitis A investigation use to confirm green onions as the contamination source?

Logistic regression models analyzing odds ratios for food items

500

During the hepatitis A outbreak investigation, what specific preparation practice for green onions was identified as a potential contributor to cross-contamination?

Rinsing green onions while they were still bundled, which may have facilitated the spread of contamination

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