Management of hospital outbreaks of gastro-enteritis due to small round structured viruses | National Resource for Infection Control (NRIC)

Management of hospital outbreaks of gastro-enteritis due to small round structured viruses

Best practice, Journal article, Review
Abstract: 
Small round structured viruses (SRSVs, Norwalk-like viruses, NLVs) are the most common cause of outbreaks of gastro-enteritis in hospitals and also cause outbreaks in other settings such as schools, hotels, nursing homes and cruise ships. Hospital outbreaks often lead to ward closure and major disruption in hospital activity. Outbreaks usually affect both patients and staff, sometimes with attack rates in excess of 50%. For this reason, staff shortages can be severe, particularly if several wards are involved at the same time. SRSVs may be spread by several routes: faecal-oral; vomiting/aerosols; food and water. Viruses may be introduced into the ward environment by any of these routes and then propagated by person-to-person spread. In an outbreak setting, the diagnosis can usually be made rapidly and confidently on clinical and epidemiological grounds, particularly if vomiting is a prominent symptom. By the time an SRSV outbreak has been recognized at ward level, most susceptible individuals will have been exposed to the virus and infection control efforts must prioritize the prevention of spread of infection to other clinical areas bycontainment of infected/exposed individuals (especially the prevention of patient and staff movements to other areas), hand-hygiene and effective environmental decontamination. This report of the Public Health Laboratory Service Viral Gastro-enteritis Working Group reviews the epidemiology of outbreaks of infection due to SRSVs and makes recommendations for their management in the hospital setting. The basic principles which underpin these recommendations will also be applicable to the management of some community-based institutional outbreaks.
Authors: 
PR Chadwick, G Beards, D Brown, EO Caul, J Cheesbrough, I Clarke, A Curry, S O'Brien, K Quigley, J Sellwood and D Westmoreland
Category: 
Control
Management
Prevention

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Summary:
The report reviews the epidemiology of outbreaks of infection due to small round structured viruses (SRSV’s) such as norovirus, and makes recommendations for their management in the hospital setting, the recommendations are also applicable to the management of SRSV’s outbreaks in community-based institutional settings.Because of the major impact outbreaks of SRSV’s can have in the hospital setting the report outlines the clinical features, modes of transmission and criteria for suspecting an outbreak so that controls can be implemented to prevent spread to other areas/patients and disruption can be kept to a minimum.The recommendations are based on the same categories used by the combined working party which published the guidelines for the control of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and the principles of the three points at which SRSV transmission can be controlled i.e. the introduction of SRSV’s into the hospital environment, containment measures at individual ward level and measures to prevent spread to other wards.The importance of cleaning and disinfecting the environment and communications are discussed and the problems of laboratory diagnosis.There is a paragraph on the scale of outbreaks between 1992 and 1995 in England and Wales and costing from a hospital outbreak in Australia. Although it causes a considerable annual burden on healthcare at the time of the publication the cost of these outbreaks seem to have been ignored and there was no published data in the UK.There are useful appendices which can be used as a basis to produce leaflets for staff, patients and visitors and policy documents and cleaning guidelines for staff
Questions Addressed:
The report outlines the information necessary to recognise, prevent further transmission and control outbreaks of SRSV in hospital and institutional community settings.
Type of Study:
Review
Methods Valid:
Yes
Methods Valid Detail:

Useful report to inform local policy, practice and information leaflets for patients, staff and visitors Although published in 2000 the prevention and control of SRSV’s remain essentially the same.

Results Reliability:
Yes: Recommendations proven in to be reliable in clinical use in most hospitals and institutionalised settings
Problems or Biases:

Pressure on bed management has increasingly seen these recommendations being overridden in hospital settings and subsequent spread of the problem to other clinical areas from the initial ward. This has inversely proven their reliability.

Relevant Studies:
Keywords:
viral gastro-enteritis small round structured viruses Norwalk-like viruses norovirus faecal oral vomiting diarrhoea environmental hygiene cruise ships
Reviewer Name:
Sue Wiseman
Reviewer Post:
Nurse Consultant –Infection Control, DH
Reviewer Affiliations:
Member Advisory Committee on Dangerous Pathogens Health Protection Adviser Royal College of Nursing P/T Member Infection Control Nurses Association