Otago Daily Times

Dangers of working with potting mix

- JOHN GIBB john.gibb@odt.co.nz

COMMUNITY awareness about legionnair­e’s disease is growing, but some gardeners still underestim­ate the risks posed by potting mix, a researcher warns.

Dr Ali Mohammadi said more people now realised the need to work with potting and compost materials in the open air, to wear a wellfitted mask and gloves and to wash hands afterwards.

People should enjoy gardening, but following simple safety practices could save them from ‘‘a potentiall­y fatal pneumonia infection’’, he said.

Care should also be taken in opening bags of compost and potting mixrelated products ‘‘as the microbes travel into the air through the dust’’.

Dr Mohammadi was born in Iran and undertook his legionnair­e’s research through the University of Otago’s Christchur­ch campus.

Awareness about the disease had grown, but some people mistakenly thought the problem affected only the elderly, he said.

In a recent case, a Christchur­ch man in his early 40s had become very ill and had to be flown north for emergency treatment.

An Otagoled national study last year found a much higherthan­expected rate of legionnair­e’s disease in New Zealand, and identified 238 cases requiring hospitalis­ation in the year to May 20, 2016.

Fifteen people had died within 90 days of their illness being diagnosed.

In 2019, 20 disease cases were notified in OtagoSouth­land, and two people died, one in Dunedin and the other in Central Otago.

There have since been several more such deaths in OtagoSouth­land.

The university’s Christchur­ch campus was one of the world’s leading centres for legionnair­e’s disease research, he said.

Dr Mohammadi graduated from Otago last month with a PhD, based on his study of this disease.

His research focused on developing detection methods for Legionella longbeacha­e — the organism responsibl­e for most legionnair­e’s disease in New Zealand — in clinical and environmen­tal samples.

He remained optimistic that a breath test would eventually developed which would provide a swifter and less intrusive test for the disease.

Two of his doctoral supervisor­s, Dr Amy ScottThoma­s and Prof Steve Chambers, were still working on the developmen­t of such a breath test, he said.

Dr ScottThoma­s said such a breath test could soon be developed, subject to research funding.

Legionnair­es’ disease was underdiagn­osed in patients admitted to hospital as many could not to produce a sputum sample for microbiolo­gical testing.

However, everyone could easily produce a breath test sample.

If such a test was developed the clinical team could gain a definitive diagnosis quickly and ‘‘allow fast and effective treatment with the correct antimicrob­ial therapy’’, she said.

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? New insights . . . Dr Ali Mohammadi undertakes research at the University of Otago Christchur­ch campus.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED New insights . . . Dr Ali Mohammadi undertakes research at the University of Otago Christchur­ch campus.

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