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Norovirus outbreak: Why it's easy to catch and hard to get rid of

Maggie Fox
WATCH LIVE
Selvanegra | Getty Images

Norovirus outbreaks across the country are bringing misery to millions of families and even forcing some schools to close. Experts say the infectious disease is one of the most contagious, hitting hospitals, cruise ships and schools first.

It's winter and the norovirus is spreading across the country again. There have been widespread reports of school closings from the nasty illness, also known as the the winter vomiting disease, the stomach bug or stomach "flu."

However, norovirus is not related to influenza. It's a notoriously contagious and difficult-to-prevent gastrointestinal virus. If someone near you is sick with norovirus, prepare yourself.

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Norovirus acts quickly

Symptoms can come on 12 to 48 hours after exposure. It can make you feel extremely sick with diarrhea and vomiting, many times a day.

Norovirus makes you vomit, violently

Norovirus is commonly known as stomach flu or winter vomiting disease. Both infections cause abdominal cramps and diarrhea, and often fever.

High numbers point to norovirus

When norovirus hits, it often causes huge outbreaks — for instance, 700 people sickened on the Royal Caribbean ship Explorer of the Seas in January 2014 or 142 people infected on a Royal Norwegian cruise ship. E. coli outbreaks often play out over a longer period of time and the numbers reported are usually much

Each year, norovirus makes 70,000 people sick enough to go to the hospital. As many as 800 people die, mostly elderly patients who become dehydrated. It's the most common cause of foodborne-disease outbreaks, CDC says.

Imagine you have a food handler who uses the bathroom and they haven't washed their hands thoroughly.
Allison Aiello
University of North Carolina, professor of epidemiology

Researchers who put together a "vomiting machine" demonstrated one reason why. The violent vomiting that marks norovirus sends small particles of that vomit into the air, carrying pieces of virus.

"We think that there's a at least a million particles released in a vomiting event and maybe more," said Lee-Ann Jaykus, the N.C. State food science professor who leads that research.

People can be infected with as few as 20 to 1,300 microscopic viral particles, so their study shows that vomiting could indeed spread the infection through the air. And the findings help explain how a batch of teenaged soccer players got sick from eating packaged cookies in Washington state in 2010.

Hard to wash away

One of the girls had thrown up in the hotel bathroom, spreading an aerosol of norovirus that landed everywhere, including on a reusable grocery bag hanging in the room. The bag, which later was used to carry the cookies, tested positive for the bug two weeks later.

Norovirus is hard to wash away. Studies show a quick application of hand sanitizer won't get rid of it, and most people don't wash their hands properly, either — it takes about 30 seconds of vigorous rubbing using hot water and soap to wash away the tiny bits of virus, and that means getting under the nails, too.

"Imagine you have a food handler who uses the bathroom and they haven't washed their hands thoroughly," Allison Aiello, who studies how disease spreads at the University of North Carolina, said. "They can end up preparing a salad for the diners that evening and end up infecting a lot of people because the food isn't cooked."

By Maggie Fox, TODAY.com/health.