Volume 20, Number 11—November 2014
Research
Sequelae of Foodborne Illness Caused by 5 Pathogens, Australia, Circa 2010
Table 3
Estimated number of sequelae illnesses resulting from domestically acquired foodborne bacterial gastroenteritis, Australia, circa 2010*
Sequelae, pathogen | Median no. Illnesses (90% CrI) | Median rate (90% CrI)† |
---|---|---|
GBS, Campylobacter spp. |
70 (30–150) |
3.1 (2–6) |
HUS, STEC |
70 (25–200) |
3.3 (1–9) |
IBS | ||
Campylobacter spp | 15,600 (9,000–26,500) | 915 (570–1,440) |
Nontyphoidal Salmonella spp.‡ | 3,500 (1,900–6,500) | |
Shigella spp. | 30 (10–80) | |
Total§ |
19,500 (12,500–30,700) |
|
ReA | ||
Campylobacter spp. | 12,500 (5,500–25,500) | 765 (415–1,375) |
Nontyphoidal Salmonella spp.‡ | 3,250 (700–9,000) | |
Shigella spp. | 29 (10–75) | |
Yersinia enterocolitica | 150 (50–300) | |
Total§ |
16,200 (8,500–30,000) |
|
Total | 35,840 (25,000–54,000) | 1,620 (1,150–2,450) |
*CrI, credible interval; GBS, Guillain-Barré syndrome; HUS, hemolytic uremic syndrome; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; ReA, reactive arthritis; STEC, Shiga toxin–producing Escherichia coli.
†No. cases per million population.
‡i.e., nontyphoidal S. enterica serotypes.
§Simulated values, which might not add to total because of rounding and variation over simulations.