Series Preview [September 9, 2004]
The doctors on the preview episode discover that the diners are suffering from an illness derived from something they had eaten.
Food and water borne diseases are one of the more common causes of the outbreaks investigated by CDC’s EIS officers.
For more information on food and water borne illnesses including suggestions on how to avoid getting sick, check out the National
Center for Infectious Diseases’ site for Food-Related Diseases.
The diners turn out to be accidentally poisoned by sodium nitrate. This type of poisoning is similar to cases investigated over the
past several years. The MMWR articles below were written by the scientists who worked on these investigations.
Note: Methemoglobinemia is the condition which occurs when the hemoglobin in the blood is replaced by methemoglobin which,
unlike hemoglobin, cannot carry oxygen. This lack of oxygen causes the skin to have a slate gray-blue cast.
In order to contain the spread of an unknown disease, public health authorities place those who are ill in isolation. The
fact sheets below contain information on isolation and quarantine.
The newborn on the series is first suspected to be the victim of child abuse. For more information and additional resources,
see the Child Maltreatment: Fact Sheet.
It is revealed that the child has a rare bone disease. For more information on bone health, check out CDC’s
National Bone Health Campaign.
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