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Legionella E-news -- 10 October 2002

**IN THIS ISSUE**
1. Five Travel-Related Legionnaires' Cases, One Death
2. Two LD Deaths in Melbourne, Australia
3. Update on Sandwell, UK
4. Three Cases Near Stavanger, Norway
5. Two LD Cases in Essex (UK)
6. Three LD Cases in Waterloo, Canada
7. Legionella Training Course in Washington, DC

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1. FIVE TRAVEL-RELATED LEGIONNAIRES' CASES, ONE DEATH
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Legionnaires' disease was confirmed in five British people who all stayed at the same hotel in Belgium within the ten days preceding illness. One of the cases was confirmed by culture and the other four by urinary antigen; L. pneumophila serogroup 1 was the cause of all five.  The five individuals were traveling in three separate groups. A 63-year-old man, who became ill on 7 September 2002 and has died, had been traveling with a group of ten people, two of whom had reported respiratory symptoms but were negative for Legionella. Three cases occurred in a man and two women who were part of a group of 46 people on a coach tour to Austria. They became ill between 21 and 24 September; all three were hospitalized. The fifth case occurred in a 65-year-old woman who was with 40 British tourists on another Austrian tour; she became ill 28 September and was hospitalized in France. All five patients had stayed only one night at the hotel in Belgium. Belgium health inspectors have investigated the hotel, collected water samples, and implemented control measures. The hotel remains open. Source: Eurosurveillance Weekly, 3 October 2002. Reported by Carol Joseph, EWGLI surveillance scheme project coordinator, Public Health Laboratory Service Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre, London, England
 

****************************************************************** 2. TWO LD DEATHS IN MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA
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Two men, ages 51 and 83, contracted Legionnaires' disease in Melbourne and have died.  As of 12 September, a 72-year-old woman with Legionnaires', also from Melbourne, was still in the hospital. Health authorities suspect all three got the disease after visiting the same area in Brunswick. One of the men lived in the Brunswick area and the other, a truck driver, had made deliveries there. The woman works in the area.  Health officials are investigating. Source: The Age
 

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3. UPDATE ON SANDWELL, UK
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Last month's E-news reported seven cases, including one death. Laboratory tests have confirmed an eighth case, a man in his 30s. The outbreak has been blamed on a cooling tower at a chemical plant. Source: BBC News
 

******************************************************************* 4. THREE CASES NEAR STAVANGER, NORWAY *******************************************************************
On 5-6 September 2002, Legionella infection was confirmed in a 49-year-old Sandnes man and a 55-year-old Stavanger man. The only common factor identified is that both make a 15-kilometer commute to work daily between Sandnes and Stavanger. Both were hospitalized in Rogaland and have recovered. A third case, a 62-year-old Stavanger woman, was identified on 7 September. News of the three cases worried Stavanger residents because an outbreak involving 28 cases and 7 deaths occurred there during the summer of 2001. Source: Aftenposten
 

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5. TWO LD CASES IN ESSEX (UK)
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As of 25 September 2002, two men with Legionnaires' disease were in critical condition in an Essex (UK) hospital. Laboratory tests confirmed the presence of Legionella. The Essex  Health Authority is investigating both cases to identify potential links.
 

******************************************************************* 6. THREE LD CASES IN WATERLOO, CANADA
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On 10 September 2002, it was reported that two construction workers, ages 34 and 47, were in critical condition after contracting Legionnaires' disease a week prior. The men were on respirators and their lungs had shut down. One of the men was experiencing additional organ failure. As of 28 September, one was still in intensive care; the other's condition was upgraded to stable. Both had been doing renovations to the roof of a hospital in the Waterloo area. A 44-year-old female patient at the same hospital was diagnosed with the disease on 7 September. At the time she had been in the hospital four days with an unrelated ailment; she may have contracted Legionnaires' before she came to the hospital. In the week of 23 September, two more workers at the hospital construction site were diagnosed with pneumonia and hospitalized. Urinary antigen tests were negative for Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1; the results of blood and sputum tests have not yet been reported.  Source: The Record
 

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7. LEGIONELLA TRAINING COURSE IN WASHINGTON, DC
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Seats are still available for the Legionella Prevention Training Course to be held 5-6 December 2002 in the Washington, DC area. The Virginia Department of Mental Health is hosting the course, but registrations should be made through HCINFO (http://hcinfo.com/legionellaseminar.htm). The course will be held at VDMH's Northern Virginia Training Center in Fairfax, Virginia. The site is only 10 miles from Washington Dulles International Airport and close to many hotels and restaurants. Only 30 seats are available, so register soon. Tuition is US$495. After registering you will receive information on transportation from the airport, driving directions, and nearby hotels.
 

If you have access to a meeting facility, and would like to host a course, please let us know. We can provide the two-day comprehensive course for a mixed group (public health officials, hospital engineering personnel, infection control directors, plumbing engineers, water treatment professionals, industrial hygienists, etc.), or tailor a one-day course for a specific audience. You can also get private training for your organization. For more information, go to http://hcinfo.com/legionellaseminar.htm*******************************************************************
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******************************************************************* (c) Copyright 2002, HC Information Resources Inc. You have permission to send this newsletter to others, post it on your web site, or include it in listserv posts, under the strict condition that you include the following notice to properly credit the source: "Excerpted from Legionella E-news, a free e-newsletter available at http://hcinfo.com." 

THANK YOU! 

Matt Freije, Editor
HC Information Resources Inc.

Tel: 760-494-3063
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