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LISTERIOSIS HEALTH ALERT

Heap of vegetables fresh. Agricultural market.

There is a reported outbreak of Listeriosis in South Africa. The infectious disease which became a public health concern in SA since 5th December, 2017 is reported to have claimed more than 30 lives prompting the SA health authority to reinforce its preventive methods. The Food and Drug Authority, Ghana has also increased surveillance to prevent the similar outbreak in Ghana. There is no need for fear but it is important to know some basics about listeriosis.

Listeriosis is a serious infection caused by the germ Listeria monocytogenes. People usually become ill with listeriosis after eating contaminated food. The disease primarily affects pregnant women, newborns, older adults, and people with weakened immune systems. It’s rare for people in other groups to get sick with Listeria infection.

Listeriosis is usually a mild illness for pregnant women, but it causes severe disease in the fetus or newborn baby. Some people with Listeria infections, most commonly adults 65 years and older and people with weakened immune systems, develop severe infections of the bloodstream (causing sepsis) or brain (causing meningitis or encephalitis). Listeria infections can sometimes affect other parts of the body, including bones, joints, and sites in the chest and abdomen.

WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS OF LISTEROSIS?

Listeriosis can cause a variety of symptoms, depending on the person and the part of the body affected. Listeria can cause fever and diarrhea similar to other foodborne germs, but this type ofListeria infection is rarely diagnosed. Symptoms in people with invasive listeriosis, meaning the bacteria has spread beyond the gut, depend on whether the person is pregnant.

People with invasive listeriosis usually report symptoms starting 1 to 4 weeks after eating food contaminated with Listeria; some people have reported symptoms starting as late as 70 days after exposure or as early as the same day of exposure.

HOW IS LISTEROSIS DIAGNOSED?

Listeriosis is usually diagnosed when a bacterial culture (a type of laboratory test) grows Listeria monocytogenes from a body tissue or fluid, such as blood, spinal fluid, or the placenta.

Listeriosis is treated with antibiotics.

PREVENT YOU AND YOUR FAMILY FROM LISTERIOSIS

People who are more likely to get a Listeria infection (pregnant womenpeople 65 years or older, and people with a weakened immune system and those who prepare food for them can:

Know which foods are risky and avoid these foods viz:

Avoid drinking raw (unpasteurized) milk or eating soft cheeses made from it >

Be aware that Mexican-style cheeses made from pasteurized milk, such as queso fresco, have caused Listeria infections, likely because they were contaminated during cheese-making.

Log on to https://www.cdc.gov/listeria/faq.html for more information

 

COMPILED BY AWIAGAH SHERRIF KWAME (BSN, Clinician, Nurse Educator)

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, OHM Consult

awiagahsherrif@yahoo.com/0543896253

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