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Campus Alert Archive
Georgia Tech

136 Students See Stamps Health Services as Norovirus Spreads Across Georgia Tech After Fall Break

GAdisease outbreakadvisoryhigh confidence
Confirmed Threat

Beginning October 11, 2017, a gastrointestinal illness began spreading rapidly across the Georgia Tech campus after students returned from fall break. By October 24, Stamps Health Services had treated 136 patients with symptoms including vomiting, diarrhea, and body aches, and the illness was confirmed as norovirus on October 25 by Fulton County Department of Health and Emory University laboratory analysis. No common food source was identified, and the university issued a public health advisory urging students to stay home while symptomatic and wash hands thoroughly with soap and water as the primary prevention measure.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
0
Injured
136
Institution
Georgia Institute of Technology
Public R1 · GA
Georgia Tech Emergency Management
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTWebsite
Stamps Health Services Advisory Update: Stamps Health Services, working with the Fulton County Department of Health and Wellness and the Georgia Department of Health, has identified the gastrointestinal illness currently spreading on campus as norovirus. Norovirus was confirmed in samples by both Fulton County Department of Health and Wellness and Emory University on October 25th. Between October 11th and October 24th, Stamps Health Services saw 136 patients with symptoms of the illness. As of October 20th, 226 people completed the survey regarding the illness and 194 people reported having had symptoms of a norovirus infection. It is unknown how this easily spread virus came to the Georgia Tech campus. We know it began to spread after students returned from fall break, but no common food source, activity, or dining or residence location has been identified as the origin. If you are experiencing symptoms, please stay home and away from others until you have been symptom-free for at least 48 hours.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The advisory was issued on October 25, 2017, the same day norovirus was confirmed by Fulton County Department of Health and Emory University laboratory analysis.
The 136-patient count refers only to those who visited Stamps Health Services; the 194 who reported symptoms on an FCDH survey suggests the actual campus-wide impact was significantly larger.
No common food source or dining location was ever identified as the origin, pointing to person-to-person transmission as the primary spread mechanism after students returned from fall break.
UPDATEWebsite
Norovirus: What You Need to Know. Norovirus is a highly contagious virus that spreads from person to person and can live on surfaces for days. The most important thing you can do is wash your hands frequently with soap and water, especially after using the restroom and before eating. Alcohol-based hand sanitizers are not effective against norovirus. If you are sick, please stay home and do not return to class or common areas until you have been symptom-free for at least 48 hours. Dining Services has enhanced cleaning and disinfection at all locations. If you need medical attention, contact Stamps Health Services.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

This follow-up advisory on October 27 specifically highlighted that alcohol-based hand sanitizer is NOT effective against norovirus, a public health nuance that distinguishes norovirus from many other infectious agents and changes the prevention guidance students need.
Dining Services enhanced cleaning at all locations with norovirus-specific disinfectants; the Fulton County Department of Health inspected the North Avenue dining hall and it received an A rating, ruling out a food-source origin.
Context

Background

In mid-October 2017, Georgia Tech students returned from fall break to a norovirus outbreak that had either been seeded on campus during break or spread rapidly once students reconvened. Stamps Health Services tracked 136 patient visits between October 11 and October 24 with symptoms of vomiting, diarrhea, body aches, and occasional low-grade fever. A survey distributed by the Fulton County Department of Health and Wellness found 226 respondents, with 194 reporting symptoms -- suggesting the true campus burden was substantially higher than clinic visits alone. The Fulton County Department of Health inspected Georgia Tech dining facilities and found no evidence of a food source; the North Avenue dining hall received an A rating. Norovirus was laboratory-confirmed on October 25 by Fulton County DCHW and Emory University. Georgia Tech's follow-up advisory on October 27 emphasized the critical public-health detail that alcohol-based hand sanitizers are ineffective against norovirus, distinguishing the response from standard flu or COVID guidance. Dining Services disinfected all campus locations with norovirus-specific cleaning agents. The outbreak resolved without reported fatalities or serious hospitalizations.
Analysis

Key Findings

136 students visited Stamps Health Services with norovirus symptoms between October 11 and October 24, 2017, and 194 of 226 survey respondents reported symptoms, indicating broad community spread.
No common food source, dining location, or campus area was ever identified as the origin; the outbreak began after students returned from fall break, suggesting import by returning students.
Georgia Tech's advisory specifically noted that alcohol-based hand sanitizers are not effective against norovirus, a key public health distinction that changes what personal prevention steps students should take.
Fulton County DCHW inspected Georgia Tech dining facilities and found no contamination, rating the North Avenue dining hall A, while Emory University confirmed norovirus in samples on October 25.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Official
  3. Official
  4. News
  5. national media
Tags
disease-outbreaknorovirusgeorgiaatlantapublic-healthadvisorydininggastrointestinalpublic-r1
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion