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Community Legionella outbreak linked to a cooling tower, 2022

Thirty-five laboratory-confirmed legionellosis cases were reported to the Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit (Ontario, Canada) between September 27, 2022, and October 15, 2022, resulting in one death and 29 hospitalizations. This article describes the outbreak and highlights activities for managing...

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Published in:Canada communicable disease report 2023-09, Vol.49 (9), p.380-386
Main Authors: Rebellato, Steven, Lee, Colin, Gardner, Charles, Kivilahti, Karen, Wallace, Jenee, Hachborn, Danielle, Fenik, Jillian, Majury, Anna, Kim, JinHee, Murphy, Allana, Minnery, John
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container_issue 9
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container_title Canada communicable disease report
container_volume 49
creator Rebellato, Steven
Lee, Colin
Gardner, Charles
Kivilahti, Karen
Wallace, Jenee
Hachborn, Danielle
Fenik, Jillian
Majury, Anna
Kim, JinHee
Murphy, Allana
Minnery, John
description Thirty-five laboratory-confirmed legionellosis cases were reported to the Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit (Ontario, Canada) between September 27, 2022, and October 15, 2022, resulting in one death and 29 hospitalizations. This article describes the outbreak and highlights activities for managing the outbreak, including various environmental and infrastructural controls associated with the public health response and some of the unique challenges and potential solutions to mitigate future outbreaks. All cases of legionellosis were reported to and investigated by the local provincial health unit. Within a 6 km radius around the community, 27 cooling towers (CTs) were identified as potential sources of . Environmental samples were collected from 19 CTs and a long-term care home. Of the 35 cases, 29 (83%) were hospitalized (including three long-term care residents) with two requiring intubation/ventilation. Of the five sputa (clinical isolates) collected from confirmed cases, four tested positive for (one was positive for serogroup 1-with the same sequence type as one of the CT isolates). Education and recommendations were provided by the local provincial health unit to operators to improve CT operation. Detection and management of community legionellosis outbreaks associated with CTs involve resources and time to properly identify and control risks. Measures for community risk mitigation included coordinating with provincial and community partners, developing methods to rapidly identify CTs as a likely source of infection and applying operational/maintenance/testing standards for CTs to control bacterial growth and minimize the dispersion of contaminated aerosols.
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identifier ISSN: 1188-4169
ispartof Canada communicable disease report, 2023-09, Vol.49 (9), p.380-386
issn 1188-4169
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1481-8531
language eng
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source PubMed Central
subjects Antigens
Bacteria
Clinical isolates
Cooling towers
Drinking water
Epidemics
Epidemiology
Hospitals
Laboratories
Legionella
Legionnaires' disease bacterium
Long-term care
Management methods
Operators
Outbreak Report
Outbreaks
Pneumonia
Public health
title Community Legionella outbreak linked to a cooling tower, 2022
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