Source of deadly legionnaires' outbreak in Victoria found, health authorities say

Health authorities have identified the cooling tower at the centre of a legionnaires' outbreak that has killed two people and hospitalised 75 others.

A woman in a blue top speaks at a press conference.

Victoria’s Chief Health Officer Dr Clare Looker said the authorities have contained the source of the outbreak. Source: AAP / James Ross

The source of Victoria's has been pinpointed, with health authorities confident it has been contained.

A cooling tower at Laverton North in Melbourne's west has been identified as the source after dozens of towers in the suburb and neighbouring Derrimut were disinfected.

"I am hopeful we've contained the source of the outbreak," Chief Health Officer Clare Looker told reporters on Monday.

"Further work is being undertaken now that we have this positive result to quantify the amount of legionella in the sample.
An emergency sign is seen outside a hospital.
Nearly 80 people have been hospitalised after a deadly legionnaires' disease outbreak in Melbourne. Credit: AAP
"Recent weather patterns could explain the wider than usual dispersal of cases."

A man in his 60s and a woman in her 90s died after being caught in the outbreak.

There are 77 confirmed cases as of Monday. All have been hospitalised.
, found in natural bodies of water, spas, warm water systems, potting mix and artificial systems that use water for cooling.

Symptoms can include pneumonia, chest infection, aches, headache, fever, cough and chills.

About 10 per cent of legionnaires' patients die.

People most at risk are adults aged over 40 years, especially those with other medical conditions, people who are immunocompromised, or those who smoke.

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2 min read
Published 5 August 2024 4:06pm
Source: AAP


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