2 more deaths linked to hepatitis A, making outbreak toll 16; some restaurant workers had it, but no food-borne transmission found
Hepatitis A has been blamed for two more deaths, both in Franklin County, bringing to 16 the statewide toll in the outbreak of the contagious liver disease, which has lasted more than a year.
None of the deaths have been connected to food-service workers, but concern about transmission by them remains a concern. Officials in Franklin and Fayette counties confirmed the disease in two more food-service workers and urged residents to get vaccinated for hepatitis A.
“Since August 2017, more than 2,275 outbreak-associated cases of acute hepatitis A have been reported in 94 of the state’s 120 counties,” Chanda Veno reports for The State Journal in Frankfort.
Franklin County Health Director Judy Mattingly “couldn’t give the victims’ age or sex, but she did explain that both cases fit within the statewide profile of those afflicted by hepatitis A, whose mean age is 37.7 years old,” Veno reports. Mattingly told her, “As with all Kentucky cases in this outbreak, it is believed that transmission occurred through person-to-person contact — when an infected individual did not thoroughly wash their hands, thereby passing microscopic fecal matter on to another person who unknowingly ingests the virus.”
Friday, Mattingly announced that one of the latest Franklin County residents diagnosed with hepatitis A worked at a Frankfort restaurant Oct. 22-25 while ill. “While rare for restaurant customers to become infected, patrons who ate at the restaurant during that four-day span have until Thursday to receive vaccination to further protect themselves from illness,” Veno reports.
“If they had improper hand washing at any point in time they could’ve possibly transmitted the virus by not washing their hands and touching either food or any of the door handles or any of the restaurant’s plates and dishes and anything,” said Jessica Cobb, a community health officer for the Lexington-Fayette County Health Department, which advises anyone who ate at the restaurant Oct. 10-28 to get a hepatitis A vaccination. “The employee is not currently working at the restaurant and will remain off work until cleared to return,” the Herald-Leader reports.
Fayette Health Commissioner of Health Dr. Kraig Humbaugh said in September, “The vaccine is effective and has an excellent track record. However, most adults have not yet been immunized since the vaccine was not given routinely as part of their childhood schedule of shots.”
Cobb said Frisch’s has been cleaned with an EPA-approved sanitizer, and “they’re also working with us to make sure that their employees get vaccinated.”