| Literature DB >> 26484688 |
Jason A Wilken, Gail Sondermeyer, Dennis Shusterman, Jennifer McNary, Duc J Vugia, Ann McDowell, Penny Borenstein, Debra Gilliss, Benedict Ancock, Janice Prudhomme, Deborah Gold, Gayle C Windham, Lauren Lee, Barbara L Materna.
Abstract
Coccidioidomycosis is associated with soil-disruptive work in Coccidioides-endemic areas of the southwestern United States. Among 3,572 workers constructing 2 solar power-generating facilities in San Luis Obispo County, California, USA, we identified 44 patients with symptom onset during October 2011-April 2014 (attack rate 1.2 cases/100 workers). Of these 44 patients, 20 resided in California outside San Luis Obispo County and 10 resided in another state; 9 were hospitalized (median 3 days), 34 missed work (median 22 days), and 2 had disseminated disease. Of the 25 patients who frequently performed soil-disruptive work, 6 reported frequent use of respiratory protection. As solar farm construction in Coccidioides-endemic areas increases, additional workers will probably be exposed and infected unless awareness is emphasized and effective exposure reduction measures implemented, including limiting dust generation and providing respiratory protection. Medical providers, including those in non-Coccidioides-endemic areas, should suspect coccidioidomycosis in workers with compatible illness and report cases to their local health department.Entities:
Keywords: California; Coccidioides; coccidioidomycosis; construction workers; disease transmission; fungi; infectious; occupational health; solar power farms
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26484688 PMCID: PMC4622237 DOI: 10.3201/eid2111.150129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Distribution of outbreak cases of coccidioidomycosis among solar farm workers, by month of symptom onset and patients’ residence, San Luis Obispo County, California, USA, October 2011–April 2014. A) Number of cases listed by month of onset and by solar farm. Investigation timeline is displayed below the x-axis. B) Number of cases during this outbreak listed by patient-reported California county or state of permanent residence (gray shading). CDPH, California Department of Public Health; SLOPHD, County of San Luis Obispo Public Health Department.
Figure 2Flowchart of outbreak investigation of coccidioidomycosis among solar farm workers, San Luis Obispo County, California, USA, October 2011–April 2014. CDPH, California Department of Public Health; SLOPHD, County of San Luis Obispo Public Health Department.
Demographic characteristics of 44 coccidioidomycosis patients who worked at 2 solar power–generating facilities, San Luis Obispo County, California, USA, with symptom onset October 2011–April 2014*
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| Male sex, no. (%) | 41 (93) |
| Median age, y (range) | 48 (21–63) |
| Ethnicity, no. (%), n = 41 | |
| Hispanic | 11 (26) |
| Not Hispanic | 28 (68) |
| Don’t know or data missing | 2 (5) |
| Race, no. (%), n = 41 | |
| White | 28 (68) |
| Not white† | 6 (15) |
| Don’t know or declined to state | 7 (17) |
| Job title, no. (%), n = 43 | |
| Electrician, lineman, or wireman | 14 (33) |
| Heavy equipment operator | 11 (26) |
| Laborer | 6 (14) |
| Carpenter, ironworker, millwright, or mechanic | 5 (12) |
| Manager or superintendent | 4 (9) |
| Other | 3 (7) |
| Permanent residence, no. (%) | |
| California, San Luis Obispo County | 14 (32) |
| California, other | 3 (7) |
| California, less | 17 (39) |
| Other state with possible | 6 (14) |
| Any other state | 4 (9) |
*Of the 44 patients, 43 were interviewed and 41 completed the interview. †Including African American, Filipino, Samoan, Native American, and multiracial. ‡Other Coccidioides-endemic counties are Fresno, Kern, Kings, Madera, and Tulare. §Other possibly Coccidioides–endemic states are Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, and Utah.
Clinical characteristics of 44 coccidioidomycosis patients who worked at 2 solar power–generating facilities, San Luis Obispo County, California, USA, with symptom onset October 2011–April 2014*
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| Visited emergency department, no. (%) | 17 (39) |
| Hospitalized, no. (%) | 9 (20) |
| Length of hospitalization, median no. days (range) | 3 (2–17) |
| Disseminated disease, no. (%) | 2 (5) |
| No. days to symptoms from first day at worksite, median (range), n = 43 | 105 (10–638) |
| Symptoms, no. (%), n = 41 | |
| Fatigue | 41(100) |
| Night sweats | 39 (95) |
| Weakness | 38 (93) |
| Difficulty breathing | 37 (90) |
| Fever | 35 (85) |
| Cough | 33 (80) |
| Joint or muscle pain | 33 (80) |
| Weight loss | 33 (80) |
| Chest pain | 29 (71) |
| Headache | 29 (71) |
| Rash or other skin lesions | 24 (59) |
| Missed work, no. (%), n = 41 | 34 (83) |
| Days missed work, median no. (range), n = 34 | 22 (1–547) |
| Diagnosed following first visit to provider, no. (%), n = 41 | 9 (22) |
| No. days to laboratory diagnosis from symptom onset, median (range), n = 43 | 23 (5–267) |
| Frequency of positive laboratory result by diagnostic method, no. (%) | |
| Complement fixation, immunodiffusion, or tube precipitin | 37 (84) |
| Complement fixation only | 10 (23) |
| Immunodiffusion only | 10 (23) |
| Tube precipitin only | 2 (5) |
| Immunohistochemistry or culture only | 3 (7) |
| IgG/IgM enzyme immunoassay only | 4 (9) |
*Of the 44 patients, 43 were interviewed and 41 completed the interview.
Figure 3Conditions during solar farm construction in San Luis Obispo County, California, USA. A) Localized dust generation associated with a soil-disruptive activity. Photograph was taken during the week of July 28–August 3, 2013 (courtesy of Aspen Environmental Group). B) Ambient dust exposure because of high-wind conditions. Photo was taken on March 5, 2013 (courtesy of Dennis Shusterman).
Potential worksite Coccidioides exposures and use of control measures during 4 weeks before symptom onset by workers at 2 solar power–generating facilities, San Luis Obispo County, California, USA, October 2011–April 2014*
| Exposure | No. (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Frequently | Infrequently | Don’t know | |
| Work duties involved, n = 43† | |||
| Manual digging | 12 (28) | 31 (72) | 0 |
| Working in a ditch or trench | 19 (44) | 24 (56) | 0 |
| Operating heavy machinery‡ | 8 (19) | 35 (81) | 0 |
| Any of the above | 25 (58) | 18 (42) | 0 |
| High dust levels, n = 42† | 39 (93) | 0 | 3 (7) |
| Used a respirator, n = 41§¶ | 10 (24) | 31 (76) | 0 |
| At the end of work, did you† | |||
| Drive home in work clothes, n = 41 | 31 (76) | 9 (22) | 1 (2) |
| Wash up before leaving work, n = 39 | 19 (49) | 20 (51) | 0 |
| Shower immediately after getting home, n = 41 | 34 (83) | 5 (12) | 2 (5) |
*Of the 44 patients, 43 were interviewed and 41 completed the interview. Some patients did not answer certain questions. †Frequently includes the responses of “every day” and “once a week”; infrequently includes the responses of “rarely” and “never.” ‡One of 8 worked with heavy equipment with an enclosed cab and high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA)–filtered air-conditioning every day. §Frequently includes the responses of “always” and “often”; infrequently includes the responses of “sometimes,” “rarely,” and “never.” ¶Does not include 1 employee who reported operating heavy equipment with an enclosed cab and HEPA-filtered air-conditioning every day.