The Guardian (USA)

‘It’s a silent killer’: fears of legionella grow amid pandemic

- Lynne Peeples

Before her 73-year-old mom contracted legionnair­es’ disease at a nursing home earlier this year, Monique Barlow knew little about the deadly pneumonia and the waterborne pathogen that causes it.

“Until then, I didn’t give it much thought,” says Barlow. “I didn’t even really know what it was.”

Sheryll Barlow, a resident at Arlington Court skilled nursing and rehab center in suburban Columbus, Ohio, died in late February. Arlington Court was just one of at least five Columbusar­ea facilities to report an outbreak of legionnair­es’ disease, which is caused by legionella bacteria, since May 2019.

Modern drinking water treatment in developed countries has effectivel­y eliminated cholera, typhoid and other traditiona­l waterborne scourges. The US Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA), passed in 1974, propelled progress by requiring water suppliers to meet national standards for monitoring contaminan­ts and managing them through filtration, disinfecti­on and other processes. The US now has one of the world’s safest drinking water supplies. And most of the attention on drinking water safety today has shifted from microbiolo­gical to chemical, with plastics, pesticides and per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, or PFAS, leading lists of contaminan­ts of concern.

Yet many micro-organisms also slip through the cracks of US drinking water systems, sickening up to an estimated 32 million people every year, although most only result in mild gastrointe­stinal upsets, some can be deadly, as witnessed by recent reports of brain-eating amoeba in Texas municipal water supply.

That figure doesn’t include wells, which are particular­ly prone to pathogen problems. In 2000, about 2,300 people fell ill and seven died in Walkerton, Ontario, for example, after heavy rainwater drew Ecoli and

Campylobac­ter jejunibact­eria from cow manure into a shallow aquifer of a nearby well.

Typical concentrat­ions of chlorine used in treatment plants can be insufficie­nt to kill off cryptospor­idiumand giardia, which cause gastrointe­stinal disease. And other infectious agents, including legionella and non-tuberculos­is mycobacter­ia, reside beyond the reaches of the treatment plant – finding hospitable environmen­ts in the pipes that distribute water to and within hospitals, hotels, homes and other buildings.

“It’s never going to be 100%, but we have things well under control for pathogens in source waters,” says Joe Cortuvo, an environmen­tal and public health consultant based in Washington DC, and formerly with the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s Office of Drinking Water. “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, Cortuvo adds, with one exception. “What has been going up has been legionella.” Figuring out why – and what to do about it – is a major focus of efforts to combat waterborne diseases today.

Covid-19

Attention to legionella has been further heightened by the Covid-19 pandemic. Some health experts express concern that a prior infection with the virus that causes Covid-19 could make a person more susceptibl­e to legionella. But there’s an even more pressing concern connecting the two: building shutdowns through the spring and summer have left warm water stagnant in pipes – a perfect environmen­t for legionella to multiply.

Many hotels, offices, schools and other buildings have been left fully or partially vacant for long periods of time, notes Chris Edens, an epidemiolo­gist with the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which recently released guidance for reopening buildings. “As those kinds of communitie­s reopen, it’s important for owners and operators to be thinking about water management.”

Legionella grow naturally in the environmen­t, especially warm freshwater lakes and streams that can be a source for drinking water. It 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.

Drinking fountains, hot tubs, sinks, toilets, sprinklers, showers and airconditi­oning systems are among the common sources. It tends to flourish when temperatur­es are warm, water is stagnant, chemical disinfecta­nts are insufficie­nt and nutrients are plentiful, such as inside corroding pipes. When inhaled at high enough levels, the bacteria can infiltrate the lungs and cause one of two forms of legionello­sis, Pontiac fever or legionnair­es’ disease. The former is usually a fairly mild respirator­y illness; the latter is far more commonly reported and estimated to be fatal in one in 10 cases.

Now the leading cause of reported waterborne disease in the US, legionella accounts for about 60% of outbreaks over the last decade. Nearly 10,000 cases of legionello­sis were reported to the CDC in 2018 – the most ever in US history, and still a likely underestim­ate. Edens suggests the true figure is probably double that. Other scientists estimate the annual case count at between 52,000 and 70,000.

Pathogen

Legionnair­es’ disease was discovered in 1976 after nearly 200 people became ill with a mysterious type of pneumonia at an American Legion convention in Philadelph­ia. Dozens died. Health officials eventually identified a new bacterium that had thrived in the building’s cooling towers and then spread though the air-conditioni­ng system.

Cooling towers were also the source of more than 2,000 confirmed cases in New York City between 2006 and 2015. In the summer of 2019, the Sheraton Atlanta hotel was closed for a month after an estimated 79 people were infected from legionella traced to the hotel’s cooling tower and decorative fountain. The hotel chain said in a statement it “took health and safety issues seriously”, and worked closely with relevant authoritie­s.

A variety of other plumbing issues and insufficie­nt water management has resulted in outbreaks around the country – at nursing homes, hospitals, schools and across whole communitie­s.

At least 87 people were infected with legionnair­es’ disease in Flint, Michigan, in 2014 and 2015 after the city switched water sources. Researcher­s found evidence for three likely sources of legionella exposure: a hospital, city of Flint water and local cooling towers. The mayor, Sheldon Neeley, told Ensia that the city is “making critically important infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts to move our community forward in a positive direction”.

Yet such large-scale legionnair­es’ disease outbreaks are “just the tip of the iceberg”, according to Joan Rose, a water researcher at Michigan State University. Research suggests that for every case linked to a specific source and outbreak there are nine sporadic cases. For example, outbreaks only accounted for about 10% of the cases in New York City linked to cooling towers.

“We don’t have legionella under control,” says Rose.

Why does legionella appear to be on the rise around the US? The answer is complicate­d, says Edens, of the CDC. The larger numbers could be partly due to greater awareness and testing. But he suggests that an ageing population and ageing infrastruc­ture are major drivers.

“In large part, our distributi­on system is very antiquated,” says Amy Pruden, a professor of environmen­tal and water resources engineerin­g at Virginia Tech. As water travels through the distributi­on system and enters a building, it can lose disinfecta­nt as well as interact with the materials, temperatur­es and design of the building’s plumbing. “Many things are at play that affect whether these microbes grow in the plumbing,” she adds.

Climate change, too, may be playing a role. Longer summers tax the cooling devices used by large buildings. More intense storms and flooding may increase the presence of legionella in drinking water.

It’s all added up to growing concerns and heightened calls to address the risks. “The thing about legionella is it’s a silent killer. You can’t see it or smell it. It’s just in the air floating around,” says Eric Hageman, a personal injury lawyer in Minneapoli­s who represents the family of Sheryll Barlow in a claim against Arlington Court. “So, you have to be proactive.”

Arlington Court had been aware of a legionella problem at the facility months before Monique Barlow’s mom became sickaftera­nother resident contracted legionnair­es’ disease in October 2019. “I just assumed they took care of everything. But then it popped back up,” says Barlow.

After learning that her mom had contracted the disease, she says she wanted to know more. “I felt like they owed us an explanatio­n. How are you fixing this? How is this not going to happen again?” Barlow says.

Since 10 February, Arlington Court has implemente­d changes, including the installati­on of filters in the kitchen, visitor areas, showers, bathrooms and ice machines.

Arlington Court and its parent company, Vrable, did not respond to multiple requests for comment by Ensia.

In a letter to residents reported on 1 March following local officials announcing an investigat­ion of an outbreak, Arlington Court said it took “very seriously the health and safety of everyone at the facility”. In a statement at the time, Vrable said it was working with authoritie­s.

Measures

Point-of-use filters are among emerging tools to control legionella.

Edens, of the CDC, emphasizes water management strategies such as flushing water pipes, controllin­g temperatur­es and using disinfecta­nt within a building. “We know water in the tap is not sterile,” he says. “The purpose of water management is to ensure that if some legionella bacteria come through the main, the bacteria have nowhere to grow and hide.”

Adding chlorine or other disinfecta­nts to water as it enters a building is yet another tactic to reduce contaminat­ion.

Consumers can also take steps to reduce risks in their own households. For example, the CDC recommends that hot tub or spa owners frequently test water for proper levels of chlorine, bromine and pH. “You need to consider the far reaches of the building. If you’re not using a second bathroom, for example, then flush the shower before people use it,” says Cortuvo, environmen­tal and public health consultant.

In a report published in August 2019 by the National Academy of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine, a committee of 13 scientists warned that current federal, state and local laws fail to protect the public from the spread of legionella.

A handful of federal, state and local regulation­s require certain buildings to have water management plans that include monitoring for and treatment of legionella. But no federal law targets legionella contaminat­ion of water supplies and building water systems.

The committee offered several recommenda­tions for improving legionella management in the US, such as requiring a minimum disinfecta­nt level throughout public water systems, developing clinical tools to capture more cases of legionnair­es’ disease, providing more guidance to homeowners, no longer allowing low-flow fixtures in hospitals and long-term care facilities, and addressing the longer periods of time that water sits idle and lower hot-water temperatur­es common in green buildings.

Many scientists argue a need for more urgent attention to and action on the issue.

“We need some coordinati­on at the [federal] level,” says Pruden, of Virginia Tech. “It’s a multi-stakeholde­r problem, but is now awkwardly being handled through the litigation system.”

• This story was produced by Ensia, a solutions-focused nonprofit media outlet reporting on our changing planet. It is an extract of a longer piece which you can read on Ensia’s website.

We don’t have legionella under control

Joan Rose

after franticall­y calling 911 to claim she was being threatened by “an African American man”, birdwatche­r Christian Cooper (no relation), who had confronted her for walking her dog without a leash in the wooded area known as the Ramble, where he habitually heads with his binoculars to take advantage of an area rich in bird life, especially as it is a stopover in seasonal avian migratory journeys.

On the video Christian Cooper recorded, Amy Cooper and he sounded calm and appeared to keep a safe distance from her.

In the footage posted on social media, Christian Cooper claimed her cocker spaniel was “tearing through the plantings” and told her she should go to another part of the park. When she refused, he pulled out dog treats, intending, he later said, to lure her dog so he could hold on to him and make sure the owner put the animal on a leash. The rules about leashes are clearly spelled out on signs in the park and Christian Cooper later talked about occasional­ly having to confront dog walkers about flouting the rules there, thereby threatenin­g the birds. The confrontat­ion caused Amy Cooper to scream at him to not come near her dog.

Amy Cooper also warned him she would summon police unless he stopped recording. “I’m going to tell them there’s an African American man threatenin­g my life,” Amy Cooper is heard saying in the video as she pulls down her face mask and struggles to control her dog.

“Please call the cops,” said Christian Cooper.

On the phone, Amy Cooper can be heard saying, in an increasing­ly frantic voice: “There’s an African American man, I’m in Central Park, he is recording me and threatenin­g myself and my dog. Please send the cops immediatel­y!” The video recording then stops. A 911 dispatcher provided prosecutor­s with a sworn affidavit regarding this and a subsequent call.

After the backlash, Amy Cooper released an apology through a public relations service, saying she “reacted emotionall­y and made false assumption­s about his intentions”.

The encounter inspired New York state lawmakers to pass a law that makes it easier under civil rights law to sue an individual who calls a police officer on someone “without reason” because of their background, including race and national origin.

Cooper was charged under an existing false-reporting law.

 ??  ?? People take a jacuzzi bath in Florida. Photograph: Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty
People take a jacuzzi bath in Florida. Photograph: Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty
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Photograph: Guardian Design
 ?? Photograph: Christian Cooper/AP ?? An image from the video sho by Christian Cooper, shows Amy Cooper with her dog talking to Christian Cooper in Central Park in New York.
Photograph: Christian Cooper/AP An image from the video sho by Christian Cooper, shows Amy Cooper with her dog talking to Christian Cooper in Central Park in New York.

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