Showing posts with label legionaires disease. Show all posts
Showing posts with label legionaires disease. Show all posts

Thursday, 6 June 2013

HSE Changing The ACOP (L8)

The HSE are conducting a consultation - it has been called to bring about changes to the ACOP (L8), to make a clearer, more definite set of guidelines.


We found the article on the FM World website; the report reads:


The legionella Consultative Document (CD258) sets out proposals from the HSE to publish an updated Approved Code of Practice (ACOP) on Legionnaire’s disease. 

The consultation provides an opportunity to comment on whether the draft ACOP text provides legal clarification and proportionate advice in low-risk scenarios. 

Accompanying guidance provides advice on achieving compliance, information of a general nature, including explanation of the requirements of the law, specific technical information or references to further sources of information. 

The revised ACOP gives practical advice on the legal requirements of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 and the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002 (COSHH). It also applies to the risk from exposure to legionella bacteria and includes information of a general nature including explanation of the requirements of law. 

Interested parties can e-mail for more information: legionella.ACOPconsultation@hse.gsi.gov.uk 
Documents and comment forms can be downloaded here. 

The other two consultations concern the Control of Dangerous Substances and Explosive Atmospheres Regulations 2002 and the amended Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002.
Industry and interested parties have until 23 August to respond.

We found the article here : http://www.fm-world.co.uk/news/fm-industry-news/hse-opens-legionella-consultation/?

Thursday, 16 May 2013

Reading Borough Council Carehome was source of Legionella

"A wash basin in a Reading Borough Council care home was the most likely source of Legionnaires’ disease that killed a 95-year-old man, an inquest heard.
Lewis Payne, of Knights Way, Emmer Green, was staying in The Willows care home, in Hexham Road, Whitley, when he contracted Legionnaires’ pneumonia.
Flaws in specific Legionnaires’ training for staff, record keeping and auditing at the home was also revealed at the inquest into his death yesterday.
Mr Payne became a resident in one of the home’s intermediate care flats from September 24, last year, for respite after fracturing his right leg.
Nearly three weeks into his stay he complained of feeling unwell.
When his condition did not improve an out of hours GP was called – he diagnosed pneumonia and a urine infection. Mr Payne was given the option of staying at The Willows with a stronger dose of antibiotics or being taken to Royal Berkshire Hospital (RBH) but he asked to stay.
On October 16 Mr Payne’s symptoms worsened and he was taken to the RBH where his urine tested positive for Legionnaires.
Despite receiving treatment he died on November 1. Following the discovery of Legionnaires an investigation was launched.
Bacteria was found in the wash basin of Mr Payne’s flat, one of the upstairs showers and an outside tap.
As Mr Payne had only had a basin wash while at the home the only likely way he came into contact with the bacteria was from the tap in his room, the inquest heard.
The care home’s water system was overseen by the council’s Property Services – they contracted water expert SMS Environmental to carry out health and safety risk assessments that would identify any potential hazards. That risk assessment was then kept with a log book in the care home office and should have identified what the care home was responsible for in terms of managing the water system and what SMS Environmental was responsible for.
However, The Willows unit manager Christine Mabbott admitted before Mr Payne’s death she was not aware of the council’s Legionnaires policy and had never had specific Legionnaires training.
Although she was aware there was a log book she had very little to do with it as she had delegated health and safety management to her deputy James Skelt, and the care home’s handy man Matthew Smith physically carried out the checks. In a statement read at the inquest Mr Smith said he had not checked the outside taps or de-scaled the shower heads as he was not aware he was meant to do this.
It was also revealed when Mr Smith went away on holiday nobody carried out the checks in his place which is why there were holes in the records.
Since Mr Payne’s death the council has introduced numerous measures to ensure the same mistakes were not repeated.
Mark Attree, engineering services manager for RBC, said: “Mr Payne’s death cannot be left to go in vain, we must learn from that.”
Since the incident the council has fitted every water outlet in the building with special bacteria filters.
However, the level of Legionnaires bacteria in the water is increasing, suggesting the source wasn’t localised, Mr Attree said.
Barrister Bryan McGuire, representing RBC, asked Mr Attree if the paperwork had been better would Mr Payne’s death have been avoided.
Mr Attree said: “I don’t think so because of what has happened since, something that is in that water system is creating the bacteria and we can’t isolate where the problem is.”
Recording a narrative verdict, Berkshire coroner Peter Bedford said: “Tests confirmed that the strand of Legionnaires found in the wash basin of Mr Payne’s room is the same type, that is not particularly common, found in his urine sample, supporting the view that on the balance of probability the tap was the source of the Legionnaires.
“While Legionnaires was the principal cause of death subsequent attempts to eradicate it has not proved completely successful.
“Investigations have identified flaws, in particular in regard to training, staff record-keeping and audit-taking but it is not possible to see from the evidence that these flaws contributed directly to Mr Payne’s death.”
Council confident measures are in place
In a statement issued after the inquest the council expressed its condolences to Mr Payne’s family and friends.
It added: “As an added precaution, the council has also carried out a review of all of its buildings stock across the borough and a detailed programme is in place for the council’s Legionella officer to visit sites on a monthly basis to ensure all relevant procedures are being followed.
“Reading Borough Council has taken the opportunity to re-emphasise to all relevant staff the importance of maintaining essential health and safety systems and to ensure that all records are kept up to date and are consistent and accurate. We are confident the measures put in place by the council will ensure this happens.”
"

Wednesday, 30 January 2013

Basildon Blunder | Legionella strikes again


The awful and unnecessary disease legionella has one again made headway in the news. Basildon Hospital were recently prosecuted again by the HSE. They were prosecuted for breach under Section 3 of the Health & Safety at Work Act over failing to protect visitors and patients adequately from legionella.

Two people have unfortunately paid the price for the negligence to the water systems between 2007 and 2010. 

Alongside huge court costs of £100,000, the hospital spend 3 million (£) in measures to finally combat the bacteria.

To read more news items or to set up a plan to combat legionella, please contact Spectrum Environmental Solutions Limited 

The full story on Basildon Hospital can be read on the BBC website


Monday, 10 December 2012

British Establishments to be checked on Legionella Control


British Establishments are going to be checked up and down the country by the HSE. Currently, the gaze has been turned to Scotland, but its only a matter of time before the rest of the UK gets involved, especially following the recent outbreaks in England. The full article reads:
Businesses are organisations in the West of Scotland with cooling towers are facing checks to ensure they are managing legionella risks appropriately. 
Currently, Inspectors from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) and local authorities are visiting cooling towers and evaporative condensers in Glasgow, North Ayrshire, Inverclyde and Renfrewshire; however checks are expected to be carried out across similar sites in Britain. 
These inspections follow the publication of a safety notice in July warning of the legionella risks posed by cooling towers and evaporative condensers, and are also part of a wider initiative to promote better control of legionella.   
“Our research has confirmed that cooling towers pose the biggest legionella risk. If we, or local authority inspectors, find that the appropriate controls are not in place, we will take enforcement action. 
A review of legionella outbreaks by the HSE in 2011 highlighted cooling towers and evaporative condensers as being responsible for the majority of the most significant outbreaks in Britain in the past ten years. 
Commenting on the visits that the HSE are currently embarking on, David Snowball, Director for Scotland and Northern England, said: 
“We are doing these visits to focus businesses' attention on ensuring they are doing what is required both to protect their workers and the wider public.
"Inspections are a valuable part of our regulatory action. They are however no substitute for companies meeting their legal duties on a daily basis, given that legionella levels can increase to high levels in a matter of days or weeks."

Friday, 16 November 2012

Man dies after Legionella found in Reading Council Care Home


Britain sees another legionella outbreak, and in a high risk building no-less. The article reads:
"A 95-year-old man who was recovering from a stroke in a council care home had died from Legionnaires' Disease. 
The man was staying in The Willows Care Home in Hexham Road, Whitley when he contracted pneumonia which was found to be caused by the Legionella bacterium.
He was taken to Royal Berkshire Hospital where he died on October 30. 
Reading Borough Council which runs the home has acknowledged "the possibility exists that the resident may have contracted Legionella bacteria at the care home, although that has not been established beyond doubt". 
After exhaustive checks to the water system, traces of the bacterium were found in a tap.Residents, their families and staff were informed. 
Spokesman for the council Derek Plews said: "The health and well-being of vulnerable residents is the council’s highest priority which is why, as a precautionary measure, we have engaged an independent expert consultant, carried out extensive testing and cleaning of the water system at The Willows and fitted special bacteria filters to all water outlets in the building. 
"We believe, on the basis of expert independent advice, that our maintenance programme at the home is fully in line with the Health and Safety Executive’s Approved Code of Practice and that the risk to residents from Legionella is as low as possible. 
"We are continuing to monitor the water system to ensure that this remains the case.
"We understand that residents, their families and staff will be concerned about this matter. 
That is why we have taken steps to keep them updated about the situation. Residents have been given the choice of a move to temporary accommodation and one person has taken up this option. 
"The council would like to emphasise that it has worked closely with the Health Protection Agency and the Heath and Safety Executive in responding to this matter. 
"We have adhered to the Health and Safety Executive’s approved code of practice on Legionella before this incident and the measures taken since are over and above the HSE guidance. 
"Reading Borough Council would like to express its sincere condolences to the family of the resident who passed away." 
The Willows, formerly Tanfield, was completely refurbished in September last year including the renewal of much of the water system. 
It has 26 beds including 15 for residents with dementia, 10 for intermediate care and one for respite care."

Monday, 22 October 2012

UPDATED! | Hospital Wards Close Due To Legionella Scare | Hornchurch, London

------ UPDATED BELOW ------

Orig Post |

Hospital wards close as patients fall ill with suspected cases of Legionnaires Disease, reported today, 22nd October 2012.

The wards closed last Friday (19th) in St George’s Hospital in Hornchurch when the disease was suspected to be affecting patients - They moved the patients when they received a high counts of legionella in the water systems back from laboratory tests, indicating that the patients my have contracted the disease, however, no confirmed cases have been announced.

The patients at the surrounding hospitals have been closely watched over this weekend to ensure the confirmation of the diagnosis. When such details become available, we'll post an update as soon as possible.

As this is a potential legionella outbreak in the County's Capital, we are sure to see a further rise in the HSE's interest in the ACOP (L8), as previously has been seen with the latest few legionella scares. Dare we say more spot checks and closer monitoring procedures are on the horizon.


------- UPDATES 23/10/2012 -------
Out-patients are now not being admitted to the hospital due to the high legionella counts found in the

Thursday, 4 October 2012

Basildon Hospital Prosecution For Careless Legionella Monitoring


(Repost)
A hospital in Essex will be taken to court after they were alleged to have failed to stop people being exposed to legionella bacteria.
The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) is prosecuting Basildon Hospital under the Health and Safety at Work Act, with the single charge from the HSE relating to a case of legionella at the hospital between February 2004 and December 2010.
Official figures show there have been 13 cases of patients catching the legionella bacteria since 2002.
Chief Executive of Basildon and Thurrock University Hospitals NHS Trust, Clare Panniker, said the hospital had spent £3m and introduced a number of changes in the past decade in an attempt to control legionella. She said:
"The trust has not had any cases of Legionnaire's Disease since 2011 and we will continue to work with the HSE and other experts to do all we can to combat Legionella. As new chief executive, I will be reviewing the leadership structure to ensure we have the right experience at board level."
She said that the report concluded that the current risk of contracting legionella at the hospital was about "one in a million".
The prosecution centres on an alleged breach of Section 3(1) of the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 which refers to the duty of employers to protect non employees from "risks to their health or safety" and the first hearing in the case is expected to take place at Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court at a later date.


Wednesday, 5 September 2012

Peterborough Primary School Closed after Legionella is Found! Updated 17/09/2012


LATEST UPDATE:

School to Re-open:


A primary school in Peterborough, closed at the beginning of September after legionella was found in the water system, is to reopen on Monday.

Bacteria that can cause the potentially fatal Legionnaires' disease were found at Newark Hill School.

Peterborough City Council expect it to reopen after workers carried out chlorination of the system to kill the bacteria.

Tests have been completed to ensure the water system is now safe.

Headteacher Lorraine Mann said: "I am pleased to report that we have been advised it is now safe to open the school on Monday.

"I would like to thank everyone for their patience and assistance during this time."




The Old Report reads:
“A primary school in Peterborough was today (Monday) closed for a week after the venue tested positive for legionella.
 Council chiefs have confirmed that routine monthly testing of the water systems at Newark Hill Primary School in Eastfield Road has generated a positive result for legionella.
 A council spokeswoman said: “A full chlorination has been carried out in the hot water systems and will continue with the cold water systems tomorrow.
 “Chlorination kills the bacteria and makes the systems safe.
 “However, it has been decided to delay the school opening until Monday 10 September 2012 as a precautionary measure pending the receipt of the re-test results, which are due on Friday 7 September.
 “Routine tests are carried out at all schools on a monthly basis. ”
 “There is nothing further we can add at this stage.”

Updates will follow....

Monday, 3 September 2012

Hinchingbrooke Invests £120k to reduce Legionella risk

It was reported that:
When Circle took over management of the hospital in February on a 10-year management franchise, the company’s head of facilities and estates, Mark Cammies, set up a new regime of inspection and testing for the legionella bacterium, which is often found in stored water and can cause pneumonia-like infection when ingested as droplets.
Circle stressed yesterday (Tuesday) that no one had been infected and that the £120,000 was precautionary investment to ensure that clean bill of health continued.
“The previous regime was not thorough enough, so we have put in a programme of much more rigorous testing,” a spokesman said. “As a result, we found a few isolated areas where there are higher than normal levels of the bacteria. The presence of the bacteria is not unusual in NHS hospitals,” she added.
Circle’s investment has already extended to installing filters in shower-heads in wards – a practice that is commonplace in hotels – and the programme includes spending £30,000 on a new chlorination system, £70,000 on the hospital pipework to eliminate areas where water can stand, and putting in a new flushing system in wards where showers are used infrequently.
Legionnaires’ disease is so-called because the bacterium was isolated as the cause of an outbreak of a ‘mystery illness’ at a convention of the American Legion in Philadelphia in 1976. it is believed to have been transmitted through a hotel air-conditioning system.

Tuesday, 14 August 2012

Another Confirmed Case in Stoke-on-Trent ; Legionnaires' Disease


 Another case of Legionnaires' disease has been confirmed in Stoke-on-Trent following an outbreak in the city thought to be linked to a hot tub.

The Health Protection Agency said the latest case brings the total to 21.

The patient, who is being treated at the University Hospital of North Staffordshire, is a man in his 70s.


Two patients being treated for the disease since the spate of illnesses began in the middle of July have died.

An HPA spokeswoman said: "This new case is not unexpected.

"It can take up to two weeks following exposure for people to develop symptoms of Legionnaires' disease and a further few days before they might see their GP."

A spokesman for University Hospital of North Staffordshire said: "Three patients remain in hospital and all are in a stable or improving condition."

It was revealed earlier this month that the probable cause of the outbreak was a hot tub at JTF Warehouse in the city after samples were found to have an unusual strain of legionella bacteria, which matched that of the strain taken from patients with the illness.

Dr Sue Ibbotson, regional director of HPA West Midlands, said the organisation has taken detailed histories from those with Legionnaires' and the majority of confirmed cases visited the warehouse in the two weeks before they fell ill.

The samples from the hot tub at JTF Warehouse in City Road, Fenton, were confirmed by the Health Protection Agency's specialist laboratory in Colindale as being the unusual strain legionella bacteria.

Thursday, 9 August 2012

The HSE Drop Standards When Monitoring Legionella

Seem's the old HSE needs to up their game in monitoring the leginella control scene- it has come to light, since the Edinburgh outbreak, that the frequency in which they check that duty holders are taking their responsibilities seriously has declined in recent years. The following report reads:

An investigation launched in the wake of the Edinburgh outbreak of the illness has exposed reductions in the number of Legionella inspections carried out by the Health and Safety Executive.
 
The probe by the publication Environmental Health News found the number of pro-active HSE inspections across the UK fell from 833 in 2009 to 464 in 2011.

The number of Legionella inspections at cooling towers dropped from 237 in 2010 to 134 in 2011. Around 2900 cooling towers are subject to inspections from the HSE.
 
The source of the Edinburgh outbreak is yet to be determined but attention has centred on cooling towers in the city.
 
Professor Hugh Pennington, emminent microbiologist and chair of the public inquiry into Scotland's fatal Wishaw Ecoli outbreak, said: "It is clearly time for a rapid root and branch reform of the regulatory system for Legionella."
 
Lawyers representing victims of the Edinburgh outbreak, in which more than 100 people fell ill and three people died, expressed serious concerns about the findings.
 Clive Garner, of Irwin Mitchell, said there were fears that towers which could pose a serious public risk will not be inspected until it is too late.

Wednesday, 8 August 2012

Edinburgh Cooling Tower Inspected Once a Decade!



Yet again, Scotland has fallen prey to the bugs of legionella, and inquiries have been made. The findings are crazy - one cooling tower was found to be only checked once every 10 years; apparently, being suspicious of some cooling towers, around the area, being completely ignored isn't a mad idea either. The details are ludicrous in following report:



SCOTLAND’S top virus expert has called for a public inquiry into the recent legionella outbreak which claimed the lives of three men.

Professor Hugh Pennington has warned of more outbreaks after discovering many of the country’s cooling towers are being inspected as infrequently as once every ten years.

“Legionnaires’ disease is one of the nastiest and most lethal of infectious diseases in the UK,” he said. “But it is utterly preventable. Something went badly wrong in Edinburgh. A public inquiry is the most effective way to establish the facts around what went wrong and to prevent yet more outbreaks.”

More than 100 people contracted the bug, which began in the south-west of Edinburgh in May. Investigations to find the source are ongoing and continue to centre on industrial cooling towers in the area.

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) has already issued notices to some of the businesses that run towers being investigated, calling for them to be better maintained and regulated.

There are about 6,000 cooling towers across the UK and the HSE only has responsibility for inspecting about half of them. The rest are checked by local councils.

Latest figures show in 2011 the HSE inspected just 134 cooling towers – compared with 237 the year before.

Prof Pennington, emeritus professor of bacteriology at Aberdeen University, said the towers were being inspected ten times less often than premises which sell food.

“There is a real lack of co-ordination regarding who inspects all of these towers, how often they do so and even where all these towers are,” he said.

“There are genuine fears some towers will be going under the radar and not inspected at all.

“Given all of this, I worry other outbreaks will follow, putting more lives at risk. This risk is real and the bug is not going away.

“Some people who fall victim to Legionnaires’ do have underlying health conditions but it is no good blaming things like smoking and drinking for this.

“The bottom line is that three people died after getting Legionnaires’ in Edinburgh and other areas of the UK.

“People should not be dying from this in this day and age.

“Yes, inquiries are expensive ,but so is the cost of looking after people infected with Legionnaires’ in our hospitals. Ultimately, an inquiry would save money and lives.”

Scottish Labour last night backed the inquiry call. The party’s health spokeswoman Jackie Baillie, said: “Prof Pennington’s intervention is significant and his authoritative voice should be a reason for the Scottish Government to pause and reflect on their decision not to have an independent inquiry.”

Tuesday, 31 July 2012

Legionella Outbreak - Stoke on Trent Update! Hot-Tub may be the Source


A hot tub is the “probable” source of an outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease in Staffordshire, health officials have said.

The Health Protection Agency (HPA) said investigations were taking place at JTF Warehouse in Fenton, Stoke-on-Trent, and the company was co-operating.

A statement from the firm said: “JTF is extremely concerned and the product has been withdrawn from all stores.”

The HPA said there had been 18 cases in the outbreak. One patient has died.

HSE Issues Safety Notice for Legionellosis



THE British Health and Safety Executive (HSE) has warned businesses that they “must do more” to protect workers and the public from Legionnaires’ disease.

The safety bulletin follows in the wake of a fresh outbreak in the city of Stoke-on-Trent, which yesterday claimed its first victim. A further 15 people have contracted the disease so far. It is the second outbreak to hit the UK within a matter of months, with one Edinburgh man dying after being infected in early June.

Some of the major sources of Legionnaires’ are industrial cooling towers and evaporative condensers. The warm water in the systems can provide a breeding ground for the Legionella bacteria, inhalation of which can cause a high fever and pneumonia with potentially fatal consequences.

HES Legionella expert Paul McDermott says that businesses have “a responsibility to manage the risks they create to protect workers and the wider public.”

“This is a reminder to them of what the law expects,” he adds. “Failure to comply with the law means they may face legal sanctions, including in the most serious cases prosecution through the courts.”

In its bulletin, the HSE says that some of the biggest risks of a Legionnaires’ outbreak can come from changes in maintenance schedules, intermittent use of a plant and unusual weather conditions – the bacteria multiply faster when it is warm.


Read More @: http://www.hse.gov.uk/safetybulletins/coolingtowers.htm

Tuesday, 12 June 2012

80 Cases of Legionella in an Outbreak in Scotland - and Rising!

New news from Scottish health officials telling of a legionella outbreak in the south-west of Edinburgh has seen an increase in the total number of confirmed cases -


Of those cases of the disease being treated in hospital, 15 are in intensive care and 27 are in general wards. A total of 16 cases are being treated in the community, 16 have been discharged from hospital. So far one man has died, named locally as 56-year-old Robert Air, from Seafield in Edinburgh.

The Health and Safety Executive and Edinburgh City Council are continuing their investigations into the possible source of the outbreak.

Monday, 19 March 2012

Guernsey Hospital System Failure of Legionella

The BBC reported an article on the high levels of bacteria and legionella found at Guernsey's Princess Elizabeth Hospital.


... "Legionella bacteria have been eradicated from the water system at Guernsey's Princess Elizabeth Hospital, according to the health department.


Ed Freestone, from the department, said: "We have basically cleared it out of the system and that is a really good result. We have cracked the problem."


Heat treatment was used after chemicals failed to solve the problem.
Unacceptably high levels of bacteria were found in January following the implementation of new, routine checks
"We've found taps we never knew we had," he said.
The source of the bacteria has not been identified.


However, Mr Freestone pointed to the number of phases of development at the hospital over 80 years, leading to water lying stagnant in some lengths of redundant pipe-work.


Mr Freestone said all the plumbing in the hospital would now be "flushed at regular intervals"."

Need a legionella risk assessment? visit www.spectrum-env.co.uk  

Thursday, 16 February 2012

The Next 'Combating Legionella Conference'



H&V News has announced the dates for the second annual Combating Legionella Manchester conference.
In a statement it said: “Building on the success of last year’s event, H&V News is delighted to announce the dates for the second annual Combating Legionella Manchester conference, taking place on the 28-29th March 2012.”
"This event will bring together facilities managers, designers and engineers from across the industry to hear essential updates on guidance and legislation, and share best practise in preventing and dealing with a legionella outbreak.”
Looks like we all need to keep our eyes open for even more changes after March 2012!

The Changes to ACOP (L8) BS 8580:2010

Okay; There have been some changes to the way things work around here, and it seems no ones really noticed...

What We All Know about the ACoP (L8) and the Control of Legionella Bacteria...

Most of us are aware, in layman's terms, that bacteria beasties can accumulate in water that isn't 'looked-after'. We also know, as duty holders, we have to abide by some rules, namely the ACoP (L8). We know we need an annual monitoring plan, and a legionella risk assessment, at least once every 2 years as a matter of routine to keep these beasties at bay.

This is No Longer the Case!
Not many people realise, some changes were made to the overall approved code of practice, late in 2010. Some added literature, which is available at a rather large sum of money, can tell you the nitty-gritty. All I know is, there's one thing that my customers really need to know, and I'll tell you for free.

Legionella Risk Assessments are now considered 'live' documentation. These changes also specify that the document must be updated in anticipation of changes to the system, and then reviewed after too.
I think it's safe to say, not coordinating the risk factor with your system designer (if indeed, they are separate), is a huge mistake, since modifications to pipework systems is a main contributor in creating 'deadlegs' (a piece of unused or capped pipework, where the legionella can grow quickly in stagnant water).

Luckily, this new course of practice makes way for a lower and more controlled risk. This also means that your supplier of water treatment services could be updating your building's risk assessment as frequently as monthly if needed!

This doesn't mean that you'll never need a full risk assessment again, since the amount of added documentation could crowd and confuse the risk assessment document itself.
It does mean, that any authority or duty holder looking for a water treatment contractor, or has a current contractor working for them, should make sure these new features of the ACoP(L8) are followed.

For a water treatment contractor that does, visit www.spectrum-env.co.uk - stay tuned, more updates of the ACoP (L8) coming soon ...

(For more info see our blog post: How often do I need an ACoP (L8) Risk Assessment?)

Friday, 3 February 2012

Legionaires Outbreaks Spain and Hong Kong

There have been, reported today, two legionella outbreaks resulting in illness and, sadly, death.

The BBC News published an article this morning, reporting the bacteria has been found in a Government Complex in Hong Kong; The threat was found only when a minister was taken ill last month, and hospitalised with the potentially fatal disease.
"Hong Kong's Centre for Health Protection has been collecting water samples from various sites in the new Central Government Offices after Education Secretary Michael Suen was diagnosed with Legionnaires' disease last month.
Samples collected from various toilets - including those at the office of Chief Executive Donald Tsang - tested positive for Legionella pneumophila, said a government statement.
Other troublespots include water taps inside the kitchens of a canteen and the Dining Hall in the Legislative Council Complex."
 Hopefully, the minister will recover, but no further report on his condition has been made. Unforgettably, the same cannot be said for British tourists aged 73, 76 and 78 died after contracting disease in Spain. a further 11 people were taken ill in Spain, who were also saying at the resort promoted by Saga Holidays. This was reported with the mailonline:
"The AR Diamante Beach Hotel in Calpe which is at the centre of the outbreak has been temporarily closed.
A regional health authority spokesman said: 'The results of our investigation into the cases of Legionnaires' Disease in Calpe show it's an outbreak which has so far affected 14 people, ten British tourists and four Spaniards.
'Recently we've learned tests on three British people aged between 73 and 78 suffering pneumonia who died in hospital showed they had contracted Legionnaires' Disease. 
'The deaths occurred on January 26 and 31 and February 2.'
The pensioners aged 73 and 78 who passed away after getting Legionnaires' died from unrelated conditions. Only the death of the 76-year-old has been attributed to the disease. 
Relatives of the three victims are thought to have flown to Spain to be by their bedsides before they died."
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2095709/Three-British-pensioners-die-Legionnaires-Disease-outbreak-Spanish-beach-hotel.html#ixzz1lJ9voKhv"


These reports should serve as a reminder to all, especially in hotel establishments, that assessing buildings for legionella is an important step in health and safety.  



Thursday, 2 February 2012

NHS Lanarkshire fined £24,000 After Patient Contracted the Potentially Lethal Legionnaires’ Disease

A 64 year old woman was taken 'gravely' ill in the formerly known Hartwoodhill Hospital - this following statement was reported:
"An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) identified Legionella bacteria in three sources in the water system at the hospital. Two of these sources, including the shower used by the patient daily, matched the strain that caused her illness."
Usually we would assume that there was no scheme in place to protect the patients from the bacteria, commonly know to proliferate in stagnant water, or built up scaly pipework - the way the disease is contracted, is through inhaling air particles carrying a spray or mildly evaporated form of the contaminated water... unfortunately, this is exactly how this woman fell ill.


The statement went on to say:
"The HSE investigation established that assessment of the risks from the potential presence of Legionella bacteria to those using the facilities had not been carried out. Neither was there a safe scheme to manage and control the risks of exposure to that form of bacteria in the water system at Hartwoodhill Hospital. The hospital officially closed last year."
These are the types of instances that can be easily avoided by implementing a good team of experts to help monitor the risks associated with legionella. 


Procurement managers - Listen up! Contact a great supplier with brilliant rates - especially if your building(s) have older patients or people, that are more at risk of contracting the disease! These things could be avoided quite easily, there is certainly no reason for anyone's life to come under threat. There is a ton of information available on the web, and good suppliers out there waiting for your call!


Let's get on top of your Health and Safety eh?


For more quick information on how you can obtain a risk assessment at a price that wipes the floor with most of their competitors, contact Spectrum, a leading supplier in the water treatment industry, on 0870 729 0199


Read more of the story quoted, published by Wishaw Press here