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Surveillance for norovirus and enteric bacterial pathogens as etiologies of acute gastroenteritis at U.S. military recruit training centers, 2011-2016.

MSMR 2018 August
An estimated 179 million cases of acute gastroenteritis (AGE) occur each year in the U.S. and AGE is commonly reported within both training and deployed U.S. military populations. Beginning in 2011, the Operational Infectious Diseases laboratory at Naval Health Research Center (NHRC) has undertaken routine surveillance of four U.S. military training facilities to systematically track the prevalence of AGE and to establish its etiologies among U.S. military recruits. Employing both molecular and standard microbiological techniques, NHRC routinely assays for pathogens of direct military relevance, including norovirus genogroups I and II, Salmonella , Shigella , and Campylobacter . During its initial surveillance efforts (2011-2016), NHRC identified norovirus as the primary etiology of both sporadic cases and outbreaks of AGE among trainees.

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