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Foodborne Outbreak Investigation Tools

On this page:

Interviewer Training Videos

 Outbreak Interviewing Strategies

Templates

These templates are designed for use in outbreaks of acute gastroenteritis. Most templates are intended for user modification to fit the circumstances. More specific instructions are embedded within the documents.

Shotgun Hypothesis-generating Questionnaires

Shotgun Hypothesis-generating Questionnaire - English (pdf)

Shotgun Hypothesis-generating Questionnaire (fillable) - English (pdf)

  • Designed for use with subtyping clusters that suggest contaminated commercial food products in wide distribution.
  • Can be used as a stand-alone PDF questionnaire, but formatted for use with a FileMaker database tool that simplifies data entry and analysis.
  • Unlike versions of the shotgun available before October 2013, this questionnaire is generated from a database and is based on an "exposure library" of potential questions.
  • Database users can generate their own questionnaires that differ (shorter, longer, different array of questions, different order) but are compatible in terms of tabulation and analysis.
  • Embedded keypunch codes are linked to the database and should not be changed.

Binomial Probability Worksheet

Binomial Probability Worksheet (XLS)

  • What if 5 of 9 cases report consumption of alfalfa sprouts? Is that "significant"?
  • This Excel worksheet allows you to calculate the binomial probability of getting X or more "yes" answers to a given exposure question if you know or can guesstimate the background rate.

Event- and Venue-centric Outbreak Questionnaire Template

Event- and Venue-centric Outbreak Questionnaire Template (DOC)


The Gopher-Beaver form

The Gopher-Beaver form (DOC)

  • Developed jointly by Minnesota and Oregon epidemiologists, this template can be used to collect standardized information about specific products implicated in commercially-distributed food outbreaks.
  • Used to collect specific product details (brand name, lot codes, purchase dates and locations, leftovers, etc.)—typically after a product is implicated. This information is useful to regulatory agencies or others who may be conducting tracebacks.

Council to Improve Foodborne Outbreak Response (CIFOR)

CIFOR is a multidisciplinary working group convened to increase collaboration across the country and across relevant areas of expertise in order to reduce the burden of foodborne illness in the United States.


It-Kit™

IT kit contents

Although many people can be talked into donating a stool specimen, we don’t always get good specimens back from everyone who says yes. Sometimes they don’t come back, and sometimes they aren’t good. After much thought, discussion, and experimentation, we’ve come up with this kit — a revolutionary new packet of materials (in English and Spanish) that makes collecting a stool specimen simple and fun. You distribute the kits, collect them when they’ve been used, process the specimens back at the health department, and send the specimens to the lab (in Oregon, send to OSPHL by courier).


Remembering Dr. Bill Keene

Bill Keene

Many of these outbreak investigation tools were developed by Dr. Bill Keene.

For more information on the life of Dr. Bill Keene and his extraordinary accomplishments, please read Remembering Bill Keene (PDF) or the CDC article (PDF) about how he touched so many lives.

Bill Keene was posthumously awarded a Lifetime Achievement Award by NSF International at the 2014 Food Safety Summit. View the award ceremony video YouTube icon

International Outbreak Museum

The International Outbreak Museum is the culmination of Bill Keene's career-long quest to document over three decades of infectious disease outbreak investigations. Exhibits consist of pictures, data, questionnaires, narratives, and historical context.

Visit the museum website.