Community Corner

After 2 E. Coli Cases Reported Among Students, SDSU Working With County Of San Diego

One case is in a residential student and the other is a non-residential student.

(Times of San Diego)

September 7, 2022

Student Health Services is working with the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency regarding reports of two students who are suspected to have Shiga toxin-producing E. coli also known as STEC.

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These cases were identified in students who began experiencing symptoms on Aug. 28 and Aug. 29. One case is in a residential student and the other is a non-residential student. At this time, a specific food source has not been identified for either of these cases. SDSU’s Environmental Health and Safety team is working closely with the county of San Diego HHSA to investigate these cases and to identify and confirm the potential source.

Additional information will be shared with the community as it becomes available.

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About Shiga Toxin-Producing E. coli or STECAccording to the California Department of Public Health, Shiga Toxin-Producing E. coli or STEC is an infection that is caused by certain types of Escherichia coli bacteria. The most common source of STEC infections is eating or drinking food, water, or drinks that are contaminated with bacteria.

Contaminated food items may be those such as raw or undercooked meat products, raw produce, and leafy greens, unpasteurized milk, apple juice or cider, or raw flour such as that in cookie dough.Symptoms of STECSigns and symptoms of a STEC infection will typically start three to four days after consuming a food or drink product that contains the bacteria. These symptoms include:

Symptoms can onset between one and 10 days after exposure.Most individuals recover from this infection within five to seven days without treatment. In some cases, individuals can experience more severe illness and may develop a serious kidney condition and require hospitalization.What You Should Do For all members of the SDSU community, if you have experienced these symptoms since Aug. 27, please notify Student Health Services by emailing healthadvisory@sdsu.edu, especially if you have had diarrhea that lasted more than three days, diarrhea accompanied by a fever higher than 102 degrees F, blood in the stool, or such frequent vomiting that you were unable to keep liquids down or were experiencing signs of dehydration such as passing very little urine.Also, if you experience these symptoms:

Protecting Yourself from STEC CDPH has shared actions you can take to protect yourself from a STEC infection:

It is also recommended that you practice good food safety habits, which include the following:

SDSU is continuing to investigate this situation in partnership with the county of San Diego. More information is on the university’s Shiga Toxin-Producing E. coli page and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control Shiga Toxin-Producing E. coli site.


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