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Cluster of Shigella cases poses low risk to general public, Multnomah County officials say

There have been 45 cases of Shigella reported in the Tri-County area, including Multnomah, Washington and Clackamas, in December so far.
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Tents in downtown Portland on March 14, 2022. | SHUTTERSTOCK
December 29, 2023

Multnomah County health officials say they are tracking an increase in cases of drug-resistant Shigella this winter, but say the general public doesn’t need to take special precautions.

There have been 45 cases of Shigella reported in the Tri-County area, including Multnomah, Washington and Clackamas, in December so far.

Not all of those cases are related to each other, however; there are multiple distinct strains of the bacteria circulating. Since 2015, Shigella has caused multiple outbreaks among people who are homeless and other high-risk groups in the Portland area.

Shigella is a bacteria that causes inflammatory diarrhea. It’s transmitted when a tiny amount of poop gets into a person’s mouth. Common ways to get infected are changing diapers, caring for a sick person, intimate contact like sex, and swallowing contaminated water.

In Multnomah County, the largest cluster of current cases includes people who are homeless. Sexual contact appears to be the most common way the infection has been transmitted, indicated in about half of the cases.

The county says the most effective intervention it has to contain the spread is providing motel vouchers for people sick with Shigella.

“It gets them off the streets at the time when they are potentially most infectious, so they aren’t visiting shelters or potentially spreading it to other people. It also gives them ready access to hygiene and toileting so they can take care of themselves,” said Sara McCall, communicable disease program manager with the county.

Cluster not localized in Portland’s Old Town, county says

County health officials say the risk to the general public is low. Shigella infections are closely monitored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, so county public health workers interview each person confirmed to have been infected. To date, the county hasn’t seen any unexplained transmission that would indicate a broader outbreak.

“We have good explanation for the folks who do acquire infection,” said Teresa Everson, interim Multnomah County health officer. “The transmission we’re seeing makes sense, for how we know Shigella spreads.”

Everson also clarified that the case cluster is not localized in Portland’s Old Town neighborhood. Recent news reports and a social media post from the Portland Police Bureau have described the outbreak as impacting Old Town.

“There is no clear geographic pattern to our cases at this time. It’s something we track really closely, but there’s no specific area for us to focus interventions on,” she said.

The infection is endemic in most countries and relatively common in the global south, where it causes hundreds of thousands of deaths, particularly among children.


This article was originally published by Oregon Public Broadcasting. It has been republished here with permission.

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