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Full Version: Four dead, 65 sick in New York City Legionnaires' disease outbreak
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Sat Aug 1, 2015 4:49pm EDT
By Katie Reilly

NEW YORK (Reuters) -
A deadly outbreak of Legionnaires' disease, a severe type of pneumonia, has now killed four people and sickened 65 in the Bronx section of New York City since July 10, New York City health officials said on Saturday.

This wave of Legionnaires', which officials have called unusual, is now more than five times the number of cases recorded in the last outbreak, in which 12 people in the Bronx fell ill in December 2014.

The disease is caused by Legionella, a bacteria found in certain plumbing systems, including hot tubs, humidifiers, cooling towers and hot water tanks. It is spread by breathing in mist from water, and cannot be spread from person to person.

The illness is most common in the summer and
early fall, according to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.

Symptoms include fever, cough, headaches and muscle aches. In response to the outbreak, the city's health department has inspected 22 buildings in the Bronx, 17 of which have cooling towers.

Five buildings, including the historic Opera House Hotel, Lincoln Medical Center and the
Concourse Plaza mall and movie complex, tested positive for Legionella.

Disinfection efforts are ongoing or have already been completed at all five sites.

Julio Vargas, general manager of the Opera
House Hotel, said the water in the cooling tower used by the hotel has been treated and
disinfected, and there have been no reports of
hotel guests falling ill.

The people who died from the disease were
older adults with underlying medical problems,
according to a city press release.

The department said the city's drinking water
supply, fountains and pools have not been
affected.

The disease earned its name following a 1976
outbreak among people who attended a
Philadelphia convention of the American Legion, a veterans organization.

Between 8,000 and 18,000 people are hospitalized with the disease each year in the
United States, according to the CDC.


(Reporting by Katie Reilly; Editing by Diane
Craft)

**Comment**

Please be careful up there Charon, this stuff isn't nothing to take lightly!
(08-02-2015, 04:39 PM)IceWizard Wrote: [ -> ]Sat Aug 1, 2015 4:49pm EDT
By Katie Reilly

NEW YORK (Reuters) -
A deadly outbreak of Legionnaires' disease, a severe type of pneumonia, has now killed four people and sickened 65 in the Bronx section of New York City since July 10, New York City health officials said on Saturday.

This wave of Legionnaires', which officials have called unusual, is now more than five times the number of cases recorded in the last outbreak, in which 12 people in the Bronx fell ill in December 2014.

The disease is caused by Legionella, a bacteria found in certain plumbing systems, including hot tubs, humidifiers, cooling towers and hot water tanks. It is spread by breathing in mist from water, and cannot be spread from person to person.

The illness is most common in the summer and
early fall, according to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.

Symptoms include fever, cough, headaches and muscle aches. In response to the outbreak, the city's health department has inspected 22 buildings in the Bronx, 17 of which have cooling towers.

Five buildings, including the historic Opera House Hotel, Lincoln Medical Center and the
Concourse Plaza mall and movie complex, tested positive for Legionella.

Disinfection efforts are ongoing or have already been completed at all five sites.

Julio Vargas, general manager of the Opera
House Hotel, said the water in the cooling tower used by the hotel has been treated and
disinfected, and there have been no reports of
hotel guests falling ill.

The people who died from the disease were
older adults with underlying medical problems,
according to a city press release.

The department said the city's drinking water
supply, fountains and pools have not been
affected.

The disease earned its name following a 1976
outbreak among people who attended a
Philadelphia convention of the American Legion, a veterans organization.

Between 8,000 and 18,000 people are hospitalized with the disease each year in the
United States, according to the CDC.


(Reporting by Katie Reilly; Editing by Diane
Craft)

**Comment**

Please be careful up there Charon, this stuff isn't nothing to take lightly!

Hi Ice,
Sorry to break in your thread, but I think you should change your name to Walter Cronkite. You bring us all the news. LOL

Nice job.
lol .... Cricket for you I may just have to do just that .... Walter Cronkite ... Hmmmm ... Maybe..
In the movie Harold and Maude, the mother tells one of the blind dates she sets up for her son, that "you may be the next walter cronkite." (twas a wee cult movie me sister and i memorized. then, when she was a phone operator for a bit, she got the male star on the phone. bud cort. i almost called him.)

this legionnaires thing is what gets people on cruise liners.

i am not working in the bronx anymore. i never lived there. we were the irish part of the bronx.

but one can get this illness from showering. i never saw that before. well, i guess that is what u posted. if its in the water tanks, and one gets ill from breathing the mist of the water, that is freaky serious.

thank u for the updates, Ice. i would have missed that.