The Sentinel-Record

Legionnair­es’ disease affects apartment residents

- DAVID SHOWERS

Two Garland Towers residents have reportedly contracted Legionnair­es’ disease, according to a notice the Arkansas Department of Health sent residents last month.

The notice to residents of the Oriole Street apartments said per Health Department protocols, residents are notified when two or more cases are reported at a single address in a three-month period. Dr. Jennifer Dillaha, director of the department’s Center for Health Advancemen­t, said the cases were reported to the public health agency by medical profession­als who treated the tenants.

She said Legionnair­es’, a waterborne form of pneumonia, can have mild to severe effects and cause death if not treated with the proper course of antibiotic­s. The notice to residents said the

building’s water would be tested for Legionella bacteria, which infects the lungs through water vapor from showers, faucets, hot tubs and air conditioni­ng cooling towers.

Preliminar­y test results the department provided in response to a public records request detected Legionella DNA in some of the samples collected last month, but Dillaha said further testing is needed to confirm if the bacteria are viable.

“It doesn’t tell us if those bacteria are dead or alive,” she said, explaining that Legionella is regularly found in water and mostly harmless if deprived of the proper living conditions. “We don’t know if it’s viable or not. We’re interested to see if it’s live bacteria. That takes time. They have to be cultured on a special medium with a petri dish with special food for them to grow.”

She said the bacteria thrive in water that’s close to 77 to 109 degrees. The National Park Service recommende­d last month that all building owners/lessees in Hot Springs National Park discontinu­e using showers connected to thermal water sources after Legionella bacteria were detected at Quapaw Baths & Spa.

“It’s usually in buildings with complex water systems like chillers and boilers,” Dillaha said. “A hotel may have them, a hospital, a cruise ship.”

The Garland Towers manager referred requests for comment to Belmont Management Co. in Fort Smith. The company had not responded at presstime.

It’s among the partners, who, according to property records, acquired the property from the Garland County Council on Aging in 2006 for $1.75 million. The following year the group granted the Arkansas Developmen­t Finance Authority a security interest in the property in return for $400,000 in tax credits. The state lending agency conditione­d allocation of the credits on a percentage of the property’s apartment units being rent-restricted and reserved for low-income tenants for a period of 35 years.

 ?? The Sentinel-Record/Richard Rasmussen ?? PNEUMONIA SCARE: Water samples collected from Garland Towers, 126 Oriole St., are being tested for viable Legionella bacteria after two residents were reported to have contracted Legionnair­es’ disease.
The Sentinel-Record/Richard Rasmussen PNEUMONIA SCARE: Water samples collected from Garland Towers, 126 Oriole St., are being tested for viable Legionella bacteria after two residents were reported to have contracted Legionnair­es’ disease.

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