Sydney, April 10 (IANS) Health authorities of Australia's state of New South Wales (NSW) have issued a public health alert for Legionnaires' disease in central Sydney.
The NSW health department said that five people with recent cases of confirmed Legionnaires' disease all visited Sydney's CDB during their exposure period.
The alert said that the five patients developed symptoms between March 30 and April 4 after spending time in central Sydney, reports Xinhua news agency.
It said that "no single source" of the infection has been identified, and it is possible that the cases are "unrelated" but that an investigation of a potential source area is underway.
Legionnaires' disease is a form of pneumonia caused by infection with Legionella bacteria, which is found naturally in freshwater. Symptoms typically develop between 2-10 days after exposure and can initially include headaches, fever and a mild cough.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the mortality rate from the disease is usually within the range of 5-10 per cent but can be as high as 80 per cent for untreated immuno-suppressed patients.
NSW Health said that the bacteria could contaminate air conditioning cooling towers, spas, shower heads, and other bodies of water.
"People walking outside or driving past may be exposed if they inhale aerosolised contaminated water," it said.
It advised NSW clinicians to consider Legionnaires' disease as a diagnosis for patients presenting with consistent symptoms, especially those who travel to the Sydney CDB in the 10 days prior to symptoms developing.
--IANS
int/sd/
You may also like
India to experience above-normal rainfall this monsoon, says IMD
2 years of Sudan war: UAE calls for peace, end to 'humanitarian catastrophe'
Mike Tyson makes honest admission ahead of Chris Eubank Jr vs Conor Benn fight
Arya Shines, Pant Struggles: 5 Storylines Halfway Through IPL
Search begins for a new PS to CM Vijayan as Ragesh appointed CPI-M's Kannur Secretary