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To tie in with World Hepatitis Day on 19 May, the scientific journal Eurosurveillance is today publishing a special issue on viral hepatitis, highlighting issues and challenges related to hepatitis B and C.

On 17 April 2008, Eurosurveillance is publishing a special issue with articles on the measles situation in Europe. The publication is linked to European Immunisation Week which runs from 21-27 April.

World Tuberculosis Day on 24 March commemorates the date in 1882 when Robert Koch presented his findings of the causing agent of tuberculosis (TB) – Mycobacterium tuberculosis. In the run up of this day Eurosurveillance publishes a special issue on the situation of TB in Europe.

Today (6 March, 2008), Eurosurveillance, the European peer-reviewed journal of infectious diseases, publishes a special issue on meningococcal disease. It includes two in-depth articles and an editorial by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC).


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Home Eurosurveillance Monthly Release  1997: Volume 2/ Issue 6 Article 2 Printer friendly version
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Eurosurveillance, Volume 2, Issue 6, 01 June 1997
Articles
Travel associated legionellosis among European tourists in Spain - a comment from the EWGLI coordinating centre

Citation style for this article: Joseph C. Travel associated legionellosis among European tourists in Spain - a comment from the EWGLI coordinating centre . Euro Surveill. 1997;2(6):pii=156. Available online: http://www.eurosurveillance.org/ViewArticle.aspx?ArticleId=156

C A Joseph, PHLS Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre, London, England.


This interesting paper has analysed the data on cases of legionellosis associated with travel to Spain and highlighted some issues which are relevant to the European Working Group for Legionella Infections (EWGLI) surveillance system, eg the reporting of cases with missing information, particularly in the early years when the scheme first started and the difficulty of interpreting data when information is incomplete. EWGLI's software is currently being rewritten to take account of further developments in the scheme and to include improved methods for analysis. The new software will be distributed to all centres later this year.

The authors argue that the names of hotels should be removed from the database when there is no evidence to link them to a case of legionnaires' disease. This issue has been raised in the past and discussed at length at annual EWGLI meetings. The consensus view of the group has been that such deletion of hotel names would severely limit the scheme's ability to fulfil its objective of detecting hotel outbreaks and clusters. The name and address of any accommodation where a case stayed during the second to tenth day before they became ill should remain on the database indefinitely. The database is dynamic and includes travel histories of all reported cases, not just hotels that have been epidemiologically or environmentally implicated in an episode of legionella infection. For single cases of legionnaires' disease (which make up the majority of cases on the database) it is not recommended that environmental investigations be carried out at the hotel of stay unless the database shows that previous cases have stayed there. The chance of the hotel being the source of infection increases when two or more cases are known to have stayed there during the ten days before becoming ill. Links can be made to hotels where cases have stayed during their incubation period only if they are on the database. Furthermore, pointing out to the country concerned that more than one case has stayed at a particular hotel over a period of time, strengthens the request of the collaborator in that country that the hotel be investigated and its control measures monitored. There are several examples on the database of outbreaks occurring at particular hotels, investigations being carried out and control measures applied, only to be followed by further cases or outbreaks at the same hotel one or two years later. Any subsequent cases are a measure of the success or otherwise of control measures taken by individual hotels in tourist resorts.

The publication of this paper is timely and will encourage debate of these issues when the EWGLI group next meets in June 1997.



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Disclamer:The opinions expressed by authors contributing to Eurosurveillance do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) or the Editorial team or the institutions with which the authors are affiliated. Neither the ECDC nor any person acting on behalf of the ECDC is responsible for the use which might be made of the information in this journal.
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