California health authorities
have determined that the highly contagious norovirus was responsible for
sickening 60 people at an upscale Bay Area hotel, sending about a dozen
to the hospital, officials said on Monday.
Thaw said she did
not know whether any of the patients ended up hospitalized, adding, "We
know patients were treated for dehydration and nausea and released
within several hours."
San Mateo County Health System spokeswoman Robyn Thaw said
norovirus was identified as the source of an outbreak of
gastrointestinal illness among guests who attended an NAACP conference
and two other events at the Hotel Sofitel in the San Francisco suburb of
Redwood City in late October and early November.
"Specimens have been collected and tested across three
separate events held at the hotel," Thaw said in an email. She said 60
hotel guests and employees became sick but did not have a breakdown of
the numbers that fell ill at each event.
She said samples were being sent to state health
authorities to determine if the norovirus cases among members of the
U.S. civil rights group were linked to illnesses at the other events.
At least 12 people from the hotel were taken to the
hospital by ambulance on Oct. 26, the day some guests at the NAACP
meeting first became ill, along with some others who drove themselves to
local emergency rooms, Thaw said.
Norovirus is the most common cause of acute gastroenteritis in
the United States, with up to 12 million illnesses each year resulting
in up to 71,000 hospitalizations and about 800 deaths, according to the
San Mateo County Health System.
Health officials said an initial onsite inspection of the
food operation found no violations linked to food-borne illness, and the
hotel resumed its food service last week after shutting it down in
response to the outbreak.
"We're making sure that ... every possible attention to
hygiene is taken care of," hotel spokeswoman Sandra Duhamel said, adding
that the hotel had told incoming guests of the situation.
The California Department of Public Health and San Mateo
County health officials were also interviewing people who reported being
ill, to learn more about how the outbreak started and spread.
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