The Columbus Dispatch

Legionnair­es’ a risk as schools reopen

- Max Horberry

The new coronaviru­s is not the only illness that teachers, students, parents and staff will have to worry about as some schools attempt to reopen this fall. Legionella could lurk in the water supplies of school buildings, and some measures to keep people in schools safe from the coronaviru­s may even increase risks from deadly illnesses caused by the bacteria.

In August, officials in Ohio found Legionella at eight schools in an assortment of towns, and a district in Pennsylvan­ia announced it had found Legionella at four of its schools.

“It is unusual to hear about nine schools in a one-week period having a detection of Legionella,” said Andrew Whelton, an associate professor of civil, environmen­tal and ecological engineerin­g at Purdue University in Indiana who has been studying the effects of lockdown on water systems. He said that more schools might be testing for the bacteria than in a typical year.

Legionella, usually Legionella pneumophil­a, is the bacteria that causes Legionnair­es’ disease, a respirator­y condition. It can form in stagnant water and then disperse through the air and be inhaled when, for example, a shower or tap is turned on. It can be fatal in 1 in 10 cases, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Although young children are less at risk of Legionnair­es’, older students, adults and people with compromise­d immune systems are vulnerable.

To protect against the spread of the coronaviru­s, many school buildings have been unoccupied since March. Their bathrooms, cafeterias and sports facilities have gone unused. Although low occupancy in schools is typical during summer breaks, many are open for summer school and other activities. Experts worry that water was left to stagnate in plumbing during lockdown and that schools don’t have plans or effective guidance from health authoritie­s for dealing with the effects of prolonged shutdowns.

“Schools generally do not have a water management plan,” Whelton said. “There’s a myth that most do. They don’t in my experience.”

Precaution­s that schools might take to limit coronaviru­s infection risk could also add to Legionella concerns. For instance, some schools are turning off drinking fountains to prevent oral spread of the virus or closing off every other sink to ensure social distancing. Some sports facilities also remain closed because of the risk to student athletes and coaches.

But stagnant water in unused drinking fountains or sink plumbing could be a good reservoir in which the bacteria could grow. And shower heads such as those found in locker rooms are common places for Legionella to proliferat­e. Facilities

managers will need to be on guard for the bacteria in school athletics complexes if sports start again next spring. And Whelton said that many people responsibl­e for managing buildings’ water systems “had no idea you can acquire Legionella from showers and toilets.”

The CDC issued guidelines for business and building reopenings after coronaviru­s lockdowns. A spokeswoma­n from the agency said that its guidelines are “applicable to all types of buildings,” including schools. But the vagueness of many of the guidelines, according to Whelton, means that schools can do as much or as little of general preventive steps and claim to be compliant.

The usual way to guard against Legionella growth is a process known as flushing. Bringing fresh water into the system keeps a small dose of chlorine in the system, which limits the bacteria’s ability to propagate. But flushing has to be done regularly and for all outlets. That means running every tap, shower and toilet.

One of the schools in Ohio that found the bacteria — Englewood Elementary in the Northmont City Schools district outside of Dayton — began flushing its system in July. When a water management company discovered Legionella in August, the school shut down all the water in the building and sent a high level of chlorine through the system. A spokeswoma­n from the district said that it is continuing to test the water to ensure its safety.

The only way to tell if the flushing is effective is to test the water. Flushing once does not get rid of Legionella if it is present. Another Ohio school, Milton Union High School in Miami County just north of Dayton, began testing its water in late July. It found that after 72 hours, the chlorine level had dropped to zero. It flushed again, and when it tested 24 hours later, the chlorine level was again back to zero. It tested the water and found Legionella.

Caitlin Proctor, a postdoctor­al fellow at Purdue who has been studying Legionella during lockdown, said that despite the use of chlorine, the bacteria’s biofilms can protect some of them from disappeari­ng completely. “They can proliferat­e again once that disinfecta­nt dissipates.”

Officials of the Fox Chapel Area School District in a Pittsburgh suburb, where the bacteria was detected in schools, said in an email to parents that the schools were sending high-temperatur­e water through the system. This process, known as thermal shock, was proposed by county health authoritie­s as another means of killing off the bacteria. However, some industry groups question the effectiven­ess of thermal shock for stopping Legionella.

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