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Science
Books &
Films:
Book Review
Legionellae
Control in
Health Care
Facilities: A
Guide for
Minimizing
Risk
From
Science
Books &
Films (Nov.
96), American
Association
for the
Advancement of
Science.
Reprinted with
permission.
Reviewed by Zafar
M. Iqbal,
Toxicology-Cancer,
TCCI, Chicago,
IL.
C,T*
Those who
attended the
American
Legion's
Pennsylvania
Chapter
convention
held in the
Bellevue-Stratford
Hotel in
Philadelphia,
July 21-24,
1976, made
public health
history out of
the tragedy
that struck
some of them
(34 deaths and
221 taken ill,
including 72
who did not
attend the
convention,
but were in
the vicinity).
The illness
came to be
known as
Legionnaires'
disease, a
mysterious
affliction
that was later
traced to a
previously
unknown
bacterium
appropriately
named
Legionella,
which was
found in the
water system
of the hotel
building.
This bacterium
was believed
to have been
transmitted
largely by
inhalation of
airborne
droplets of
contaminated
water.
As it turned
out, the
bacterium was
not really
new, because
it was found
in frozen
samples from a
previously
unresolved
1965 incident
at a
Washington DC,
hospital in
which 81
inpatients had
mysteriously
developed
pneumonia,
with 14
deaths.
In the past 20
years, major
scientific and
medical
advances have
been made
against
Legionnaires'
disease.
At least 39
different
species of
bacteria have
since been
identified,
each with more
than one
serogroup, and
each serogroup
with a number
of subtypes.
L. pneumophila
and one of its
serogroups
(with at least
50 subtypes)
seem
responsible
for most cases
of this
disease so
far.
Considerable
epidemiological
evidence is
now available,
with a lot
known about
preventive
measures
necessary to
eliminate the
very source of
the bacterial
contamination.
Freije's slim
handbook deals
with practical
preventive
measures and
safety
practices
against
Legionella,
particularly
in health care
facilities.
Apart from the
fact that
visitors and
inpatients in
such
facilities may
be relatively
more
susceptible
and more at
risk than the
general
population,
most of the
measures and
practices can
also be
applied to
domestic water
systems and
cooling towers
and other
facilities.
This book,
with health
care
facilities and
professionals
in mind,
describes how
to evaluate
the risk of
Legionella in
a facility and
what actions
to take to
deal with it,
from
preventive
measures (such
as collecting
water and air
samples and
initiating
decontamination
and
disinfection
procedures)
and routine
maintenance
(using sample
logs, etc) to
emergency and
outbreak
response.
The volume
contains basic
background
information on
the bacterium
and the
epidemiology
of the
disease, as
well as
clinical
concerns,
together with
adequate
documentation
(48 references
and about 100
bibliographical
listings), a
number of
figures and
tables, and
even a concise
practical
handout for
physicians,
nurses, and
those
connected with
infection
control.
One of the
four
appendices is
a detailed
"Source
Directory,"
listing
contacts for
environmental
laboratories
(in the United
States and
abroad) for
sample
analyses, case
investigators
and
disinfection
control
personnel,
tower
consultants,
suppliers,
specialist
attorneys,
professional
societies, and
trade
associations.
This book
offers a
practical,
"Action-based"
approach to
one of the
more insidious
problems that
a health care
facility could
ever face.
The
information is
presented in a
clear and
concise
manner, and
the book is
easy to read
and follow and
has quite a
few
appropriate
references for
further
reading.
With a
usefulness
that goes
beyond just
health care
facilities,
the book is
well worth
reading.
I recommend
it.
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