Baltimore Sun

Hopkins Hospital buildings emptied

Frozen TB spill triggers evacuation; hospital official offers reassuranc­es

- By Sarah Meehan and Lauren Lumpkin smeehan@baltsun.com twitter.com/sarahvmeeh­an

Two cancer research buildings at Johns Hopkins Hospital were evacuated Thursday due to possible tuberculos­is contaminat­ion, according to the hospital.

The Baltimore City Fire Department investigat­ed the release of a small amount of frozen tuberculos­is in a bridge between the two buildings in the 1500 block of Orleans Street, Kim Hoppe, a spokeswoma­n for the hospital, said in a statement.

There were employees in the area when the incident occurred, but hospital officials said they believe no one was exposed to the bacteria and they did not treat anyone after the sample was released.

“We have determined there is no risk involved,” said Dr. Landon King, executive vice dean of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

King said the sample that leaked was “equivalent to a few drops.”

The Baltimore Fire Department received a call about the tuberculos­is spill at 12:22 p.m., said Chief Roman Clark, a department spokesman. Nearly a dozen fire vehicles surrounded the hospital’s cancer research center Thursday afternoon. A hub of white tents, which usually hosts the hospital’s weekly farmers market, was converted into a waiting area for those evacuated.

The bridge where the sample leaked was between two buildings that do not connect to the hospital. Because the buildings are used for research, no patients were in either building.

The Fire Department previously thought the sample could spread through the buildings’ heating and cooling system, but the hospital “took action immediatel­y” by shutting down the ventilatio­n system, King said.

Tuberculos­is is an airborne bacterial disease that can infect the lungs and other parts of the body. Symptoms include coughing that lasts at least three weeks, weight loss, coughing up blood, fever and fatigue, according to the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

The contagious disease killed 1.7 million people worldwide in 2016, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It’s rarer in the United States — only 9,272 cases were reported in the U.S. in 2016, according to the CDC. People with weakened immune systems are more likely to contract tuberculos­is, which is typically treated with a course of drugs for at least six months.

Dajuan Robinson, who works in a Hopkins building across the street from the cancer research center, said he was concerned when he received a text message alert from the hospital about the leak.

“When I saw the text I knew it was something serious,” said Robinson, a histotechn­ician. “They just let us know it was a hazmat situation and kept us updated.”

Marcy Omondi said she hadn’t seen anything like the incident in her 15 years as an administra­tive coordinato­r in the cancer research center. She said she was out getting lunch at the hospital’s farmers market when she heard the fire alarm sound inside. She was toldshecou­ldn’tgobackint­oretrieveh­erkeys.

It’s unclear how many people were evacuated. The buildings remained closed for several hours but reopened about 4:20 p.m., after public safety officials and infectious disease experts gave the all-clear.

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