Hawke's Bay Today

Lessons from outbreak

Gastro contaminat­ion in Havelock North was a ‘terrible event but useful science'

- Dr Keith McLea WHAT DO YOU THINK? Email editor@hbtoday. co.nz to have your say. Dr Keith McLea is the chief executive of ESR.

It’s two years since the biggest waterborne campylobac­ter outbreak in the world which risked denting public confidence in the safety of our water supplies.

The outbreak caused at least one death and thousands getting sick. It is a stark reminder of how much we rely on the safety of our water supplies.

The Government inquiry that followed highlighte­d a number of steps water suppliers could take to better protect those water resources.

Environmen­tal Science and Research, the organisati­on that I lead, has a lot to do with drinking water.

We monitor standards and are also involved in the identifica­tion and tracking of pathogens like campylobac­ter, which was the cause of the Havelock North gastroente­ritis outbreak.

Each year ESR scientists prepare a report for the Ministry of Health surveying networked drinking water supplies serving population­s of more than 100 people.

To meet standards, water suppliers have to address two key components, one covering the quality of the water and another related to the sampling requiremen­ts.

Drinking water contaminat­ed by bacteria from humans or animals poses the greatest risk of disease.

The detection of an indicator organism in the water such as E. coli shows that water has been in contact with faecal matter, indicating the possibilit­y of pathogens, which a water supplier needs to respond to.

In the Havelock case, finding E. coli in water samples was the first step in the process of identifyin­g contaminat­ion to the supply which was ultimately traced to livestock near one of the bores.

In that case our scientists were able to obtain a water sample during the early stages of the event that contained campylobac­ter which they could definitive­ly link to the cases of illness being experience­d by local residents.

In many water contaminat­ion cases, we may not realise there is an issue until after the contaminat­ion event has passed.

Then there are the delays between consuming the water and people getting sick — from one to 10 days depending on which organisms are there.

So before water suppliers even realise they have a problem, that contaminat­ion is no longer there and scientists are left trying to re-establish conditions that were similar to the time of the event. A confusing factor is that there are many potential sources of contaminat­ion such as from a range of livestock to leaking septic tanks and sewage pipes.

Another challengin­g factor is that we have an incomplete understand­ing of how pathogens like campylobac­ter travel through the groundwate­r system and how long they survive.

New research from one of our groundwate­r scientists has shown that campylobac­ter can survive in the groundwate­r system for two weeks, making the tracking of these pathogens even more challengin­g.

We have come a long way in our understand­ing of groundwate­r.

I am hosting a public event at the East Pier Hotel in Napier on October 24 that looks at the research done by our scientists since the Havelock North outbreak to improve the quality and quantity of our groundwate­r.

But we cannot stop here, drinking water supplies continue to be vulnerable in parts of New Zealand, especially in smaller communitie­s where there are less resources to maintain the multi-barrier approach.

This is the just the beginning of our journey and there is still more we need to know to help protect the resource for future generation­s.

A microbiolo­gist in our team recently commented that the Havelock North event was a terrible event from which some important and useful science emerged.

We only hope that those lessons can be learnt and implemente­d and there will not be another death linked to waterborne illness.

 ?? Photo / Warren Buckland ?? Brookvale Rd bore No 1, Havelock North.
Photo / Warren Buckland Brookvale Rd bore No 1, Havelock North.

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