Transfusion-acquired hepatitis A in a premature infant with secondary nosocomial spread in an intensive care nursery
P. H. Azimi, R. R. Roberto, J. Guralnik, T. Livermore, S. Hoag, S. Hagens and N. Lugo
An outbreak of hepatitis A involving 15 nurses, two premature infants, and
the mother of one infant occurred in an intensive care nursery. The infants
became infected after receiving blood transfusions from a donor who shortly
thereafter experienced symptoms compatible with hepatitis A and was later
found to have serologic evidence of acute hepatitis A. Hepatitis was not
suspected clinically in the infants but was documented serologically. One
of the infants had an ileostomy with liquid intestinal drainage. Her mother
and most, if not all, of the nurses acquired hepatitis from this infant.
All 15 nurses had contact with this infant, whereas only four nurses had
contact with the second infant. The amount of contact nurses had with this
infant clearly was related to their risk of infection. Nurses not actually
assigned to this infant but who reported some contact had a significantly
lower attack rate than those assigned to the infant. Among assigned nurses,
those assigned to more than one shift had 4.7 times the risk of acquiring
hepatitis than those assigned to one shift only. No specific nursing
techniques or personal habits were documented as being significant risk
factors in the infected group of nurses.