Publications by authors named "G F Craun"

A survey was conducted in the Czech Republic to determine whether serological responses to the 15/17-kDa and 27-kDa Cryptosporidium antigens had changed since the end of the communist era and if these responses were associated with drinking water sources. Sera from 301 blood donors residing in six areas served by various sources of drinking water were analysed by Western Blot (mini-immunoblots) to measure the IgG response. The intensity of response and percentage of persons with a strong response to the 27-kDa, but not the 15/17-kDa, antigen were higher than found 20 years earlier.

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Analyses of the causes of disease outbreaks associated with contaminated drinking water in the United States have helped inform prevention efforts at the national, state, and local levels. This article describes the changing nature of disease outbreaks in public water systems during 1971-2008 and discusses the importance of a collaborative waterborne outbreak surveillance system established in 1971. Increasing reports of outbreaks throughout the early 1980s emphasized that microbial contaminants remained a health-risk challenge for suppliers of drinking water.

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Article Synopsis
  • The CDC, EPA, and Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists have been tracking waterborne disease outbreaks since 1971 through the Waterborne Disease and Outbreak Surveillance System (WBDOSS), which reports on the causes and scope of these incidents in the U.S.
  • The report summarizes 48 outbreaks from January 2007 to December 2008, including previously unreported cases, with a focus on outbreaks linked to drinking water and other types of water use.
  • In this period, 36 drinking water-associated outbreaks affected over 4,100 individuals and resulted in three deaths, primarily involving bacterial agents, alongside some viral and parasitic cases.
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Since 1971, the CDC, EPA, and Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) have maintained the collaborative national Waterborne Disease and Outbreak Surveillance System (WBDOSS) to document waterborne disease outbreaks (WBDOs) reported by local, state, and territorial health departments. WBDOs were recently reclassified to better characterize water system deficiencies and risk factors; data were analyzed for trends in outbreak occurrence, etiologies, and deficiencies during 1971 to 2006. A total of 833 WBDOs, 577,991 cases of illness, and 106 deaths were reported during 1971 to 2006.

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