logo
Legionnaires' Disease Experts Call for Proactive Approach to Legionnaires' Disease Prevention in MD

Legionnaires' Disease Experts Call for Proactive Approach to Legionnaires' Disease Prevention in MD

WASHINGTON, Feb. 13, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- The Alliance to Prevent Legionnaires' Disease (ALPD) urges city officials in Baltimore and state and federal officials to take more proactive steps to address Legionnaires' as a water quality issue to prevent disease.
Over the last several months, legionella, the bacteria which causes Legionnaires' disease has been found in several federal and state government buildings in Baltimore, was recently identified in Spring Grove Hospital in Catonsville, and a positive case announced at a prison in Jessup. Rather than continuing to take a wait-and-see approach to where the bacteria will turn up next, Maryland officials should put policies in place to prevent this disease, which can be deadly for one in ten who contract it.
'The best way to protect people from Legionnaires' Disease is to properly treat Legionnaires' as the water quality issue it is,' said Dr. Hung Cheung, Founder & President of Cogency located in Maryland and an ALPD Board member. 'States should take a proactive approach to Legionnaires' prevention by ensuring that water is properly managed from its source to treatment plant and through the water distribution system to prevent the infection of our buildings and homes with this bacteria and other waterborne pathogens.'
Maryland can look to the recently enacted law in New Jersey which created a source-to-tap policy for effective water management to prevent Legionnaires'. Specifically, source-to-tap management includes:
Maintaining an adequate disinfectant residual at all points in the public water distribution system
Monitoring water quality throughout the public drinking water supply and distribution system
Notifying water consumers of distribution system conditions or events that may lead to increased risk, especially for susceptible populations
Thoroughly investigating all cases of Legionnaires' since the vast majority of cases (96%) are single or sporadic (not tied to an outbreak)
Positively identify the source of legionella bacteria after investigating all cases
Managing building water systems according to best practices with ASHRAE Standard 188
'States like Maryland must take a pro-active approach and this is especially true in the mid-Atlantic and Northeastern parts of the US which are home to the oldest water systems in the country,' Dr. Cheung said. 'If we want to truly reduce incidence of Legionnaires' Disease, then we need to focus on prevention efforts to include the water supply and the system delivering water to our homes and offices for human use.'
Legionnaires' disease cases reported to the CDC total more than 8,000 people annually and other estimates are much greater, with individual cases comprising 96% and outbreaks of two or more totaling 4%. On average Maryland has a couple hundred reported cases of Legionnaires' disease per year which can be prevented by addressing it as a water quality issue and enacting source-to-tap policies to address it.
https://preventlegionnaires.org/.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

StopTheBleed.com Launches As A Dedicated Resource for Bleeding Control Kits
StopTheBleed.com Launches As A Dedicated Resource for Bleeding Control Kits

Yahoo

time33 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

StopTheBleed.com Launches As A Dedicated Resource for Bleeding Control Kits

LELAND, N.C., June 12, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- In recognition of the 10th anniversary of the STOP THE BLEED® initiative, Rescue Essentials is proud to announce the launch of a streamlined e-commerce destination for officially licensed STOP THE BLEED® kits and mass casualty response solutions. Designed to help organizations of all sizes prepare for bleeding emergencies, provides expertly curated kits for schools, public buildings, factories, offices, and anywhere else traumatic bleeding can happen. Each kit is built at our North Carolina facility with trusted components from Rescue Essentials and other leading manufacturers such as SAM Medical and North American Rescue " makes it easier than ever for people to find the exact bleeding control kits they need, whether to comply with local legislation or simply to be better prepared," said Jim Seidel, Rescue Essentials CEO. "Our team is here to assist with product selection, identify applicable state requirements, and even help customers locate available grant funding to support their preparedness goals." As a licensed partner of the U.S. Department of Defense's STOP THE BLEED® program, Rescue Essentials is committed to supporting this international public health initiative, which empowers bystanders to take action and save lives in the critical moments following a traumatic injury. represents Rescue Essentials' continued dedication to delivering high-quality, accessible medical response products and training support to first responders, safety officials and everyday heroes across the country. About Rescue Essentials Since 2007, Rescue Essentials has remained focused on its original goal — to offer top quality tactical, emergency, combat, and outdoor medical products at affordable prices, delivered in a timely manner. Rescue Essentials' core capabilities include the design, manufacture, and assembly of purpose-built trauma and medical kits for law enforcement, EMS and government agencies. Rescue Essentials, a division of Tri-Tech Forensics, Inc., is based in Leland, N.C. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Tri-Tech Forensics

Life Flight Network Announces Timeline for Expansion into Hawai'i, Investing $27M in New Air Medical Operations
Life Flight Network Announces Timeline for Expansion into Hawai'i, Investing $27M in New Air Medical Operations

Yahoo

time33 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Life Flight Network Announces Timeline for Expansion into Hawai'i, Investing $27M in New Air Medical Operations

AURORA, Ore., June 12, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Life Flight Network, the nation's largest not-for-profit air ambulance provider, is proud to announce the launch of its operations on the island of Hawai'i, beginning this fall. Life Flight Network will invest $27 million into its Hawai'i operations, building on the previously announced $15 million investment from the Daniel R. Sayre Memorial Foundation through the acquisition of a new Airbus H145 helicopter. This funding will cover aircraft acquisition, medical equipment, and facilities for three bases on the Big Island, expanding critical care access for residents and visitors. "Our team has spent the past several months listening to and learning from community leaders, hospital partners, and public officials across Hawai'i," said Ben Clayton, CEO of Life Flight Network. "We've heard firsthand about the challenges patients face in accessing timely, high-quality emergency medical transportation. Our goal is to increase access, improve outcomes, and save lives. We're honored to serve the people of Hawai'i and proud to partner with the Daniel R. Sayre Memorial Foundation in supporting the health and safety of these communities." Life Flight Network has received a warm welcome from the Big Island, including support from Mayor Kimo Alameda. "Ensuring the safety and well-being of our Hawai'i Island community is my top priority, and I'm excited to welcome Life Flight Network to the Big Island," said the mayor. "Their decision to open multiple bases here strengthens our emergency response capabilities and brings critical care closer to our rural and remote areas. This partnership is an important step in protecting the lives of both residents and visitors." This support is echoed by local healthcare leaders. Hawai'i Health Systems' Hawai'i West Region CEO, Clayton McGhan, added, "We welcome Life Flight Network's expansion to Hawai'i Island, where access to timely emergency care can mean the difference between life and death. Enhancing air medical transport capacity is vital for rural communities like ours, and this investment represents an important step in strengthening the island's overall emergency response system." In partnership with Queen's North Hawai'i Community Hospital and Kona Community Hospital, Life Flight Network will initially station an Airbus EC135P2+ helicopter at each facility. These will transition to Airbus H145 helicopters by mid-2026. Additionally, a Pilatus PC-12NG fixed-wing aircraft will be based at Hilo International Airport. The ramp-up to full operations will begin this fall. In addition, and through a unique partnership with the Daniel R. Sayre Memorial Foundation, Life Flight Network will operate a new Airbus H145D3 helicopter on behalf of the foundation. The Daniel R. Sayre Memorial Foundation acquired the helicopter through the generosity of many donors to improve access to air ambulance services and chose Life Flight Network to operationalize the asset. "This partnership is rooted in a shared mission to save lives," said Dominic Pomponio, Chief Business Officer at Life Flight Network. "Our Hawai'i operations represent a significant investment in the people of Hawai'i—not only through aircraft and equipment, but also by hiring highly trained personnel who will serve this community 24/7." Life Flight Network's bases in Hilo, Kona, and Waimea will support emergency transports between the hospitals and from the Big Island to O'ahu. "We are pleased that Life Flight Network will be offering our residents and visitors another option for critical air medical transport," said Stephany Nihipali Vaioleti, President at Queens North Hawai'i Community Hospital. "We all know the importance of our most critically ill and injured patients getting advanced care in a timely manner, and this new service will help save lives." With over 47 years of experience, Life Flight Network operates one of the most advanced and trusted air medical programs in the United States. Its expansion into the state of Hawai'i underscores its commitment to increasing access to lifesaving care in rural and underserved regions. The organization is currently hiring for their upcoming Hawai'i locations and qualified individuals are encouraged to apply. For those interested, please visit ABOUT LIFE FLIGHT NETWORK Life Flight Network exists to fulfill its mission of saving lives through industry leading care and transport. It is the largest not-for-profit air medical service in the United States and is accredited by national and international accrediting bodies for safety, operations, and clinical excellence. Life Flight Network maintains its own FAA Part 135 Operating Certificate, offering ICU-level care during air and ground transport across the Pacific Northwest and Intermountain West. Headquartered in Aurora, Oregon, Life Flight Network is owned by a consortium of Legacy Health, Oregon Health and Science University, Providence Health and Services, and Saint Alphonsus Regional Medical Center. It was named the 2021 Program of the Year by the Association for Air Medical Services. For more information or to become a member visit View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Life Flight Network

The Best Wellness Advice Has Always Been Free
The Best Wellness Advice Has Always Been Free

Yahoo

time41 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The Best Wellness Advice Has Always Been Free

The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here. This is an edition of Time-Travel Thursdays, a journey through The Atlantic's archives to contextualize the present. Sign up here. Allow me to make myself sound very dainty and attractive: Last year, I was diagnosed with inflammatory bowel disease. This was an unfortunate development, I decided, and so not in line with 'brat summer.' I handled the news like any journalist might—with compulsive research and fact-checking. My fear directed me to Reddit threads and scientific studies, to new diet plans and workout regimens and supplement orders, until my unremitting quest for answers landed me in the Zoom office of a functional-medicine doctor, a woman who charged me a couple of hundred bucks to tell me that I should eat more boiled plantains. My search for wellness had gone too far. I was spending money I didn't have to try to fix an illness with origins I'd never understand, much less control. Yet I trust that I'm far from alone in this desire to feel good. Every year, the average American spends more than $6,000 on 'wellness,' an imprecise category that includes both fads and legitimate endeavors, with offerings as varied as diagnostic technologies and protein popcorn. Across the world, wellness is a $6.3 trillion business—outpacing even the pharmaceutical industry—and Americans are by far the biggest spenders. Although some health issues require interventions or specialists (which can be exorbitantly expensive), the wellness industry tells Americans that no matter their condition—or lack thereof—there's always some treatment they should be buying. There's always more Googling and optimizing to be done. Take the journalist Amy Larocca's book, How to Be Well, which details her wellness-industry misadventures, including 'gravity' colonic cleanses, $200-a-month prescription herbs, and $1,000 Goop events. In a recent Atlantic review of the book, the writer Sheila McClear observed how widespread the 'wellness craze' has become, noting that 'in a nation known for its relatively poor health, nearly everybody seems to be thinking about how to be healthy.' Yet, like the human body's frailty, America's obsession with wellness is far from new. In our archives, I found a letter addressed to someone else facing an unsexy stomach ailment: 'A Letter to a Dyspeptic,' published in 1859, includes some remarkably sassy advice from an anonymous writer to a 19th-century gentleman with indigestion. This writer is all tough love, unafraid to call the gentleman an 'unfortunate individual,' a man of 'ripe old age, possibly a little over-ripe, at thirty-five,' and, due to the fellow's unique bathing habits, an 'insane merman.' The dyspeptic man had spent the past years suffering, quitting his business and doling out cash to questionable doctors and therapies, to little avail. 'You are haunting water-cures, experimenting on life-pills, holding private conferences with medical electricians, and thinking of a trip to the Bermudas,' the author writes. But this search for a cure came at a high cost: 'O mistaken economist! can you afford the cessation of labor and the ceaseless drugging and douching of your last few years?' Any hyperfixation on wellness can be draining and futile; an endless search for answers to one's ailments might be alluring, but 'to seek health as you are now seeking it, regarding every new physician as if he were Pandora,' the writer warns, 'is really rather unpromising.' In lieu of expensive treatments, the writer advises that the dyspeptic man do three things: bathe, breathe, and exercise. (Another suggestion is to purchase 'a year's subscription to the 'Atlantic Monthly,'' one of the 'necessaries of life' for happiness—it seems we writers have never been above the shameless plug.) Notably, all of these (except the Atlantic subscription, starting at $79.99) are more or less free. Written almost two centuries later, Larocca's book ends on a similar note, championing the kind of health advice that doesn't hurt your wallet. After her tiresome and expensive foray into the world of wellness, she 'doesn't recommend a single product, practice, or service, although she does name one tip that helped her,' McClear notes. 'It's a simple breathing exercise. And it's free.' America's wellness methods have changed over time—sometimes evolving for the better. (The 1859 letter, for instance, details how some philosophers believed in being as sedentary as possible because 'trees lived longer than men because they never stirred from their places.') Even so, as skyrocketing costs and medical mistrust plague American health care, the wellness industry churns out a carousel of treatments, touting sweeping benefits that are often dubious at best. Compared with the many big promises that 'gravity' colonics and supplement companies might make, most health tips that have stood the test of time are far more quotidian: sleep, exercise, breathe. Their simplicity can be both healing and accessible. The body has 'power and beauty,' the anonymous writer noted more than a century ago, 'when we consent to give it a fair chance.' When you buy a book using a link in this newsletter, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic. Article originally published at The Atlantic

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store