Category Archives: water microbiology

Research – Cryptosporidiosis – Annual Epidemiological Report for 2018

ECDC

Executive summary

  • For 2018, 20 European Union/European Economic Area (EU/EEA) countries reported 14 299 cryptosporidiosis cases, of which 14 252 were confirmed.
  • The notification rate was 4.4 confirmed cases per 100 000 population.
  • Four countries accounted for 76% of all confirmed cases, with the United Kingdom (UK) alone accounting for 41%.
  • As in previous years, most of the cases were reported in autumn (peak in September), but in 2018 a smaller peak was also observed in spring (April).
  • Children aged 0–4 years had the highest notification rate of 15.8 cases per 100 000 population.

Click to access CRYP_AER_2018_Report.pdf

USA – More than 1,200 customers of Monterey Water Company told to boil water before use

NM Political Report

More than 1,200 water users in Valencia County have been asked to boil their water after E. coli bacteria was discovered in a routine sample.

These customers receive their water from Monterey Water Company. The New Mexico Environment Department instructed the utility to issue a boil water advisory on Oct. 2, according to a press release.

E. coli is commonly found in the intestines of both humans and other animals and NMED states that the bacteria’s presence in water indicates that it may have been in contact with sewage or animal waste.

A sample that tests positive for the bacteria can indicate the presence of dangerous strains of E. coli or other organisms that can cause water-borne illness, the press release states. Symptoms of water-borne illnesses include gastrointestinal problems and, in rare instances, these illnesses can be deadly. Sensitive populations including children, senior citizens and people with compromised immune systems have increased risk of contracting these illnesses.

When a boil water advisory is issued, the customers in the affected area are encouraged to boil their water for three minutes prior to drinking it or using it to make coffee, tea, other drinks or ice. The water should also be boiled before using it for cooking, washing fruits and vegetables or brushing teeth. Additionally, residents should boil the water before using it to prepare infant formula or to provide drinking water to pets.

The boil water advisory only affects customers who receive water from Monterey Water Company. Other surrounding areas are not impacted.

Boil water advisories usually last for a few days. For example, residents in the Lovington area were under a boil water advisory for approximately three days in January after E. coli was found in the Lovington Municipal Water Supply.

Monterey Water Company is a privately-owned water utility that has been serving customers in Valencia County since the 1980s. The company was formed to provide water to Monterey Mobile Home Estates and Monterey Park units two and three. These subdivisions are located southeast of Los Lunas.

The utility has two active wells that it uses for groundwater and does not use any surface water.

This is not the first time that E. coli has been detected in the Monterey Water Company’s system. According to the New Mexico Drinking Water Bureau’s Drinking Water Watch databaseE. coli was also detected in 2020 and in 2014.

USA – Legionnaires’ Disease outbreak in New Jersey ongoing, Additional cases reported

Outbreak News Today

Legionella_Plate_01

The New Jersey Department of Health (NJDOH) reported this week four cases of Legionnaires’ disease in Hamilton Township, Mercer County between May-August 2021, along with an additional reported case from November 2020.

State and local health officials continue to work closely to investigate these cases as part of a larger investigation, which was initiated in August 2020 following a reported cluster of four cases.

Hamilton Township reported two deaths in August 2020 and an additional death was reported late last month in an elderly township resident among the nine reported cases.

Legionnaires’ disease is a type of pneumonia that people can get after breathing in aerosolized water (small droplets of water in the air) containing Legionella bacteria. Symptoms of Legionnaires’ disease include cough, shortness of breath, fever, muscle aches, and headaches which are similar to symptoms caused by other respiratory infections, including COVID-19.

Ireland – 50 sick in Ireland by contaminated drinking water; officials chided – STEC E.coli

Food Safety News

More than 50 people are ill in Ireland after a failure at a treatment plant led to contaminated water being released to the public.

The Health and Service Executive (HSE) is investigating an outbreak in the town of Gorey in North Wexford. There have been 52 confirmed illnesses linked to the incident, including cases of Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC), with a number of hospitalizations.

At Gorey water treatment plant in County Wexford, there was a power outage and a chlorine pump failure resulting in water leaving the plant and entering the public supply without the appropriate level of disinfection for five days beginning Aug. 19. This incident was not reported to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and HSE until Aug. 26.

Authorities said the delay in reporting prevented a timely risk assessment of the impact on drinking water quality and time to allow measures that could have protected public health.

EPA conducted two audits at Gorey water treatment plant on Sept. 7 and 16 to investigate the incident and to identify what corrective actions needed to be taken.

Research – Implementation of a national waterborne disease outbreak surveillance system: overview and preliminary results, France, 2010 to 2019

Eurosurveillance

Waterborne disease outbreaks (WBDO) are still a public health issue worldwide [13]. They are generally caused by the microbiological contamination of tap water, and acute gastroenteritis (AGE) is the most common syndrome in affected people. Faced with this issue, many countries have implemented dedicated surveillance systems [1,35]. However, notification processes (voluntary or mandatory) vary, as do definitions for WBDO. Standardised information is collected including epidemiological, clinical and, occasionally, biological data, as well as data on the drinking water supply zone (WSZ) in question and operating and distribution incidents. A WSZ refers to a geographically defined area within which water intended for human consumption comes from one or more sources, and where water quality may be considered as approximately uniform. Although most surveillance systems are affected by under  detection, assessments all tend to highlight the same risk factors: rainy events leading to pollution and flooding of the water resource, microbiological vulnerability of the resource, operating incidents (disinfection failure, filtration incident) or a distribution incident (pipeline break, backflow of waste water to the drinking water supply) [6]. Moreover, contributing environmental factors may be aggravated by climate change, thereby increasing the health burden attributable to tap water [7,8].

In France, health authorities notify WBDO to Santé publique France (SpFrance, the French Public Health Agency). SpFrance then investigates the reported issue [912]. There is no standard declaration procedure for reporting WBDO. They are usually notified to health authorities through voluntary reporting by general practitioners or pharmacists following official drinking water monitoring results, or following consumer complaints (smell, taste, etc). Rarely, WBDO are also notified through the Food-borne Infectious Outbreak (FIO) mandatory surveillance system, which is also managed by SpFrance. The lack of a specific WBDO surveillance system leads to underestimation of their health impact. Studies based on improving sensitivity, by using health insurance data to record medicalised acute gastroenteritis (mAGE) cases, have proven both their utility in the study of infectious risk attributable to tap water, and their applicability in retrospective WBDO detection systems [1316].

In this context, SpFrance, in partnership with the Ministry of Health and regional health agencies (ARS), designed a national French WBDO surveillance system based on health insurance data. The 3-year start-up period to test the system commenced in April 2019. Its main objectives are (i) to facilitate the identification and management of WSZ that need to be secured and made safe to protect consumers’ health and (ii) to improve contamination prevention through increased knowledge of WBDO in France and associated risk factors. Furthermore, this new system will provide epidemiological indicators to better estimate the health impact of WBDO.

This article presents the structure and organisation of this new French WBDO surveillance system. We focus on the web-based application EpiGEH, which was specially developed for the system by SpFrance.

Research – Is Fresh Produce in Tigray, Ethiopia a Potential Transmission Vehicle for Cryptosporidium and Giardia?

MDPI

CDC Giardia2

In rural Ethiopia, where people often share their homes with their livestock, infections of humans and animals with Cryptosporidium and Giardia are relatively common. One possible transmission route is consumption of contaminated fresh produce; this study investigated the occurrence of Cryptosporidium and Giardia in fresh produce in four districts of rural Tigray in Ethiopia. Fresh produce samples (n = 55) were analysed using standard laboratory procedures. Overall, 15% (8/55) of samples were found to be contaminated. Although contamination levels were mostly low, a few samples had high numbers of Giardia cysts (up to around 70 cysts per 30 g sample). Molecular analyses were largely unsuccessful, but Giardia Assemblage A was identified in one sample. Contamination with these parasites was identified in two of the four districts, but, although a similar pattern has already been described for water contamination, this may be at least partially explained by sampling bias. Nevertheless, we speculate that access to clean water sources may be an important factor for reducing the occurrence of these pathogens. Given the public health and veterinary burden associated with both parasites, the factors which are of importance for their circulation in the communities and environments deserve further investigation. View Full-Text

Ireland – Legionnaires’ disease

HSE

CDC legionella

Legionnaires’ disease is a lung infection you can catch by inhaling droplets of water from things like air conditioning or hot tubs. It’s uncommon but can be very serious.

How you get Legionnaires’ disease

You can catch Legionnaires’ disease if you breathe in tiny droplets of water containing bacteria that cause the infection.

It’s usually caught in places like hotels, hospitals or offices where the bacteria have got into the water supply. It’s very rare to catch it at home.

You can catch it from things like:

  • air conditioning systems
  • spa pools and hot tubs
  • showers, taps and toilets

You cannot usually get it from:

  • drinking water containing the bacteria
  • other people with the infection
  • places like ponds, lakes and rivers

When to get medical help

Urgent advice:Get advice from your GP now if

you have a bad cough and:

  • it does not go away
  • you cannot breathe properly
  • you have severe chest pain
  • you have a high temperature or feel hot and shivery
  • you feel like you have severe flu

These could be symptoms of Legionnaires’ disease.

You should contact your GP and tell them where you have been in the past 10 days, such as if you stayed in a hotel, spa or hospital. Your GP will assess and advise you.

If you are unable to contact a GP and you are very unwell, you may need to go to your emergency department (ED).

Research – Application of chitosan microparticles against human Norovirus

Journal of Food Protection

Human norovirus (HuNoV) is the leading causative agent of foodborne outbreaks and is associated with the second most prevalent cause of waterborne infections in the United States. The goal of this research was to investigate the antiviral activity of chitosan microparticles (CM) against HuNoV GII.4 Sydney and its cultivable surrogate, Tulane virus (TuV), in suspensions mimicking fecally-contaminated water. CM was prepared by crosslinking chitosan molecules with sodium sulfate, and then its anti-noroviral activity was assessed using infectivity assay on TuV and RT-qPCR on TuV and HuNoV. A 3% CM suspension in PBS (pH 7.2) showed binding to TuV particles but with a negligible impact on virus infectivity (p>0.05). TuV and HuNoV suspended in fecal suspensions showed a 1.5-log10 reduction in genomic copies per ml following a 10-min contact time (p<0.05). Despite the negligible impact on viral infectivity, CM moderately binds to virus particles and helps purify environmental water by removing infectious virus particles. In this study, TuV served as a suitable surrogate for HuNoV by showing a similar log10 reduction in fecal suspension. Overall, the outcomes of thisresearch highlight the potential application of CM as a novel, natural treatment to minimize the spread of water-transmitted viral pathogens.

 

USA – Jellystone Park Camp Resort-Yogi on the Lake E. coli O157 Outbreak

Food Poison Journal

The Mississippi State Department of Health (MSDH) has identified several cases of E. coli O157 infection associated with use of the swimming pool and/or splashpad at the Jellystone Park Camp Resort-Yogi on the Lake in Pelahatchie, Miss.

The cases identified so far have exposure dates on the weekend of July 30th through August 1st, but additional exposures may have occurred through August 9, 2021. The pool and splashpad were closed on August 9, 2021.

USA – DC issues Boil Water Advisory for parts of Northeast after E. coli concerns

FOX5

ecoli

The District has issued a Boil Water Advisory for portions of the Northeast due to the possibility of elevated levels of E. coli/coliform bacteria.

The advisory was issued Thursday and includes the neighborhoods of Edgewood, Brookland, Fort Lincoln, Woodridge, Queens Chapel, Michigan Park and North Michigan Park. Officials say approximately 14,000 residents have been affected.

The impacted region is approximately:

– East of North Capitol Street

– West of Eastern Avenue

– South of New Hampshire Avenue

– North of New York Avenue