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What you need to know about legionnaires' disease

What you need to know about legionnaires' disease

CBC08-07-2025
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Legionnaires' disease is in the headlines this week after public health officials in southwestern Ontario declared an outbreak of the severe respiratory illness.
What is legionnaires' disease?
Legionnaires' disease is a respiratory infection caused by the Legionella bacteria.
Early symptoms include fever, chills and a dry cough.
It can lead to a serious chest infection or pneumonia, with symptoms that may include high fever. The symptoms usually develop days after being exposed to the bacteria — and can be fatal.
The name of the disease comes from an outbreak of pneumonia that killed 29 people at an American Legion Convention in Philadelphia in 1976.
How does it spread?
Legionella bacteria live in various sources of water — both natural and man-made.
People can get infected after inhaling water droplets contaminated with the bacteria. That might be through breathing in droplets, or mist released to the air from things like cooling towers, hot tubs or plumbing systems.
Legionnaires' disease cannot be spread from one person to another, the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) said.
Cooling towers, a component of industrial air-conditioning equipment, can be a good environment for the bacteria to grow, and these towers can release large quantities of water droplets into the air.
Since a cooling tower emits evaporated air, it could create conditions for water droplets contaminated with bacteria to be sent into the air and spread by wind, control experts say.
This is why they are often linked to outbreaks of legionnaires' disease, PHAC said.
Outbreaks occur more frequently during periods of warm weather, researchers have found.
Risk factors for developing legionnaires' disease include being older than 40 years of age, smoking, alcohol consumption, chronic lung disease, chronic kidney disease, diabetes, being immunocompromised and recent travel.
Is it a severe disease?
The infection can lead to pneumonia, with symptoms that may include high fever and chills.
Sometimes there can be gastrointestinal symptoms.
"By the time they come to the hospital, they're already very short of breath," said Dr. Zaki Ahmed, chief of staff at Toronto's Humber River Hospital and a critical care physician who has treated legionnaires' disease.
"They're having some chest pains, they're having nausea, vomiting. They may or may not have confusion," he said.
Because it's a rare disease, the mortality rates are difficult to estimate, Ahmed said.
How is it treated?
When patients come to the hospital with pneumonia, the antibiotics that doctors commonly prescribe typically kill Legionella, said Dr. Isaac Bogoch, an infectious diseases specialist based out of the University Health Network's Toronto General Hospital.
But the antibiotics won't be enough in some severe cases, he said.
"It's not just the infection, it's also the inflammatory response following the infection," Bogoch said.
In the most severe cases, multiple parts of the lungs can be impacted by the disease, and some people with the infection will need to be treated in the intensive care unit, he said.
What about prevention?
Public Services and Procurement Canada notes that Legionella bacteria can proliferate in building water systems under certain conditions:
Temperature ranges between 20 C and 50 C.
Stagnant water.
Sanitation in the system is lacking.
Overall, the risk of getting legionnaires' disease is generally quite low, PHAC said.
"In your home, you can reduce the risks through proper maintenance of all mist-producing devices, such as shower heads, hot tubs, whirlpool bathtubs and humidifiers," the federal health agency suggests. "Make sure you clean and disinfect these devices regularly according to manufacturer directions."
But bigger buildings often use water as a cooling source, Humber River's Ahmed said. As they do, the cooling units aerosolize that water into the air, which we then inhale, he said.
Why is it so widespread in London, Ont.?
On Tuesday, health officials in London, Ont., said one person died and more than 40 people became ill in the city.
The Middlesex-London Health Unit, which declared an outbreak of legionnaires' disease, said the bulk of cases were reported within the last week.
Most of the people with the severe respiratory illness live or work on the southeast side of the city, officials said.
WATCH | Pinpointing outbreak source in London, Ont.:
London, Ont., health officials tracking down source of legionnaires' outbreak
3 hours ago
Duration 2:51
Investigators are trying to pinpoint the source of the outbreak, but they need to analyze environmental samples of many types of cooling systems.
"I know this is what most people are anxious to understand, is where it is coming from. So are we. Unfortunately, we don't yet have a location," said Dr. Joanne Kearon, associate medical officer of health at the Middlesex-London Health Unit.
In 2024, the city also had an outbreak of legionnaires' disease that led to two deaths and 30 infections. Public health authorities weren't able to find the source of that outbreak, Kearon said.
"The outbreak came to a natural end at the end of the summer, which is very often when cooling systems would be turned off. So it was something we were hypothesizing ... may return. And that's unfortunately what we have seen," she said.
It's not known whether the same location is affected in the current outbreak, the health unit said.
Public Health Ontario said Legionella bacteria are "ubiquitous" in the environment and most cases in the province are sporadic.
Between 2018 and 2023, PHAC reported about 620 confirmed cases each year on average.
What's happened in previous outbreaks in Canada?
In 2012, an outbreak of legionnaires' disease in Quebec City caused 14 deaths and made about 200 people sick. Health authorities confirmed that an air-conditioning unit at the top of an office building in Quebec City was the origin of the bacteria. The building was owned by the Centrale des syndicats du Québec.
In response, the Quebec government introduced new regulations for the operation and maintenance of cooling towers, such as a registry and a certified control plan for each tower.
In New Brunswick, public health officials also recommended a cooling tower registry and associated rules to stem outbreaks.
A long-term care home in Toronto's east end was linked to 23 deaths in 2005.
city officials said at the time.
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