Community Outbreak of Pseudomonas aeruginosa Infections Associated with Contaminated Piercing Aftercare Solution, Australia, 2021
Benjamin T. Trevitt
, Anthea L. Katelaris, Catherine Bateman-Steel, Sandra Chaverot, Sinead Flanigan, Toni Cains, Elena Martinez, Andrew Ginn, Vitali Sintchenko, Arthur Jones, Kishen Lachireddy, Mark J. Ferson, and Vicky Sheppeard
Author affiliations: South Eastern Sydney Public Health Unit, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (B.T. Trevitt, A.L. Katelaris, C. Bateman-Steel, S. Chaverot, S. Flanigan, T. Cains, M.J. Ferson, V. Sheppeard); University of Sydney, Sydney (B.T. Trevitt, E. Martinez, A. Ginn, V. Sintchenko, V. Sheppeard); Institute for Clinical Pathology and Medical Research New South Wales Health Pathology, Sydney (E. Martinez, A. Ginn, V. Sintchenko); St George Hospital, Sydney (A. Jones); Health Protection NSW, Sydney (K. Lachireddy); University of New South Wales, Sydney (M.J. Ferson)
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Figure 1
Figure 1. Weekly emergency department visits across New South Wales, Australia, by patients with piercing-site infections during 2016–2021 compiled for study of community outbreak of Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections associated with contaminated piercing aftercare solution. Data on emergency department visits and admissions for piercing-related infections were obtained from the New South Wales, Australia, Public Health Rapid Emergency, Disease, and Syndromic Surveillance system.
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Page created: August 21, 2023
Page updated: September 20, 2023
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