12/14/2023 / By Olivia Cook
A large community outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease linked to poorly maintained water systems in California’s Napa County has caused the death of one person and infected more than a dozen.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) disclosed the outbreak, which happened between July and August 2022, in a Dec. 8 report. According to the report, Napa County Public Health (NCPH) identified 17 cases of Legionnaires’ diseases at the time. Fourteen of the cases were confirmed, while three were suspected.
Of the 17 cases, 16 were hospitalized. Ten of the 16 hospitalized individuals were transferred to intensive care; five were put on ventilators; and one died. The longest hospital stay was reportedly 36 days.
Interviews with patients or their family members revealed that 14 of the 17 cases lived in downtown Napa and Calistoga. Two visited downtown Napa, and one was working at the area.
According to the Daily Mail, CDC investigators traced the cluster of cases to “filthy maintenance of several water plant cooling towers.” This allowed Legionella bacteria to fester and run through the pipes into buildings, hospitals and people’s homes and their taps – “potentially exposing them to the bacteria when they drank contaminated water or breathed in tainted water droplets.”
Visual inspection, a review of maintenance records and sampling test results revealed that many lacked biocide application, low or no detectable chlorine at the time of sampling, improper distribution methods, or other problems with the water and wastewater management systems.
“We’ve had outbreaks from decorative fountains, and we’ve had outbreaks from potable water systems where people were getting infected probably through the showers and even the faucets,” said Dr. Arthur Reingold, who heads the University of California, Berkeley‘s epidemiology and biostatistics division. But the most common situation has been contamination of a particular type of air conditioning called a cooling tower.”
Legionnaires’ disease is a severe form of pneumonia that can be life-threatening when your lungs get infected by Legionella bacteria. Pulmonary symptoms of Legionnaires’ disease include confusion, cough (usually dry), coughing up blood (hemoptysis), diarrhea, fever (often over 104 F or 40 C), generalized body and muscle aches, headaches, nausea, shortness of breath (dyspnea) and stomach (abdominal) pain. (Related: Legionella bacteria in municipal water systems has killed or sickened thousands – is anything being done to address the problem?)
People who fall under these categories are more likely to catch Legionnaire’s disease:
According to a report published by Smithsonian Magazine, Legionella bacteria and other dangerous pathogens still lurk in drinking water in the U.S. despite the use of modern drinking water treatments.
Washington, D.C.-based environmental and public health consultant Joe Cotruvo said, “It’s never going to be 100 percent, but we have things well under control for pathogens in source waters. The data show that those risks are going down and have been going down ever since the Safe Drinking Water Act was implemented.”
“That is with one exception. What has been going up has been Legionella. Figuring out why – and what do to about it – is a major focus of efforts to combat waterborne diseases today.”
The report indicated that attention to Legionella has been heightened by the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic because of two factors. First, COVID-19 infections could make people more susceptible to Legionnaire’s disease. Second, building shut-downs through the spring and summer of 2022 have left warm water stagnant in pipes — a perfect environment for Legionella to multiply.
CDC biomedical engineer and epidemiologist Chris Edens noted: “Many hotels, offices, schools and other buildings have been left fully or partially vacant for long periods. As those kinds of communities reopen, owners and operators need to be thinking about water management.”
Legionella grows naturally in the environment, especially in warm water bodies that can be drinking water sources. Health experts pointed out that the bacteria generally only becomes “a risk to human health when it enters and multiplies within human-made water and plumbing systems and then that contaminated water becomes aerosolized.”
“When inhaled at high enough levels, the bacteria can infiltrate the lungs and cause one of two forms of legionellosis – Pontiac fever, which is usually a fairly mild respiratory illness, or Legionnaires’ disease, which is a far more commonly reported and estimated to be fatal in one in 10 cases.”
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Watch this video that explains what Legionnaires’ disease is all about.
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Deadly Legionella bacteria found on medical equipment at University of Washington Medical Center.
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