| Literature DB >> 29121003 |
Katharine M Benedict, Hannah Reses, Marissa Vigar, David M Roth, Virginia A Roberts, Mia Mattioli, Laura A Cooley, Elizabeth D Hilborn, Timothy J Wade, Kathleen E Fullerton, Jonathan S Yoder, Vincent R Hill.
Abstract
Provision of safe water in the United States is vital to protecting public health (1). Public health agencies in the U.S. states and territories* report information on waterborne disease outbreaks to CDC through the National Outbreak Reporting System (NORS) (https://www.cdc.gov/healthywater/surveillance/index.html). During 2013-2014, 42 drinking water-associated† outbreaks were reported, accounting for at least 1,006 cases of illness, 124 hospitalizations, and 13 deaths. Legionella was associated with 57% of these outbreaks and all of the deaths. Sixty-nine percent of the reported illnesses occurred in four outbreaks in which the etiology was determined to be either a chemical or toxin or the parasite Cryptosporidium. Drinking water contamination events can cause disruptions in water service, large impacts on public health, and persistent community concern about drinking water quality. Effective water treatment and regulations can protect public drinking water supplies in the United States, and rapid detection, identification of the cause, and response to illness reports can reduce the transmission of infectious pathogens and harmful chemicals and toxins.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29121003 PMCID: PMC5679581 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6644a3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Waterborne disease outbreaks associated with drinking water (N = 42), by state/jurisdiction and month of first case onset — Waterborne Disease and Outbreak Surveillance System, United States, 2013–2014
| State/ Jurisdiction | Month | Year | Etiology* | Predominant illness† | No. of cases | No. of hospitalizations§ | No. of deaths¶ | Type of water system** | Water source | Setting |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alaska | Aug | 2014 |
| AGI | 5 | 0 | 0 | Community | River/Stream | Community/Municipality |
| Arizona | Jan | 2014 | Norovirus (S) | AGI | 4 | 0 | 0 | Transient, noncommunity | Unknown | Camp/Cabin Setting |
| Florida | Sep | 2013 | ARI | 4 | 4 | 0 | Community | Well | Hospital/Health care | |
| Florida | Nov | 2013 | ARI | 4 | 4 | 0 | Community | Other | Other§§ | |
| Florida | Apr | 2014 | ARI | 2 | 2 | 0 | Community | Well | Hotel/Motel/Lodge/Inn | |
| Florida | Jun | 2014 | ARI | 3 | 2 | 0 | Community | Unknown | Long-term care facility | |
| Florida | Aug | 2014 | ARI | 6 | 4 | 0 | Community | Unknown | Hotel/Motel/Lodge/Inn | |
| Idaho | Sep | 2014 |
| AGI | 2 | 0 | 0 | Unknown | Unknown | Hotel/Motel/Lodge/Inn |
| Indiana | Jul | 2013 | AGI | 7 | 0 | 0 | Community | Unknown | Mobile home park | |
| Indiana | Nov | 2014 | Unknown | AGI | 3 | 0 | 0 | Community | Unknown | Apartment/Condo |
| Kansas | Jun | 2014 | ARI | 2 | 2 | 0 | Community | Unknown | Hospital/Health care | |
| Maryland | Nov | 2012 | ARI | 2¶¶ | 2¶¶ | 0 | Community | Well | Hotel/Motel/Lodge/Inn | |
| Maryland | Feb | 2013 | Nitrite*** | AGI, Neuro | 14 |
| 0 | Community | Lake/Reservoir/ Impoundment | Indoor workplace/Office |
| Maryland | Apr | 2014 | ARI | 2 | 2 | 0 | Community | Lake/Reservoir/ Impoundment | Apartment/Condo | |
| Maryland | Jul | 2014 | ARI | 2 | 1 | 0 | Community | Well | Hotel/Motel/Lodge/Inn | |
| Maryland | Aug | 2014 | ARI | 2 | 2 | 0 | Community | River/Stream | Prison/Jail (Juvenile/Adult) | |
| Michigan | Jun | 2014 | ARI | 45 | 45 | 7 | Community | River/Stream | Hospital/Health care, Community/Municipality††† | |
| Montana | Jul | 2014 | Norovirus | AGI | 62 | 0 | 0 | Transient, noncommunity | Well | Hotel/Motel/Lodge/Inn |
| New York | Jul | 2013 | ARI | 2 | 2 | 0 | Community | Lake/Reservoir/ Impoundment | Hospital/Health care | |
| New York | Jun | 2014 | ARI | 2 | 2 | 0 | Community | Well | Hospital/Health care | |
| North Carolina | Dec | 2013 | ARI | 3 | 2 | 0 | Community | Unknown | Long-term care facility | |
| North Carolina | Dec | 2013 | ARI | 7 | 3 | 0 | Community | Unknown | Long-term care facility | |
| North Carolina | May | 2014 | ARI | 7 | 6 | 1 | Community | Other | Long-term care facility | |
| North Carolina | Jun | 2014 | ARI | 3 | 3 | 0 | Community | Unknown | Long-term care facility | |
| North Carolina | Jul | 2014 | ARI | 3 | 2 | 1 | Community | Unreported | Long-term care facility | |
| Ohio | Apr | 2013 |
| ARI | 2 | 2 | 1 | Unknown | Unknown | Long-term care facility |
| Ohio§§§ | Sep | 2013 | Cyanobacterial toxin¶¶¶ | AGI | 6 | 0 | 0 | Community | Lake/Reservoir/ Impoundment | Community/Municipality |
| Ohio | Jul | 2014 | ARI | 14 | 4 | 0 | Community | River/Stream | Long-term care facility | |
| Ohio | Aug | 2014 | Cyanobacterial toxin¶¶¶ | AGI | 110 |
|
| Community | Lake/Reservoir/ Impoundment | Community/Municipality |
| Ohio | Oct | 2014 | AGI | 100 | 0 | 0 | Individual | River/Stream | Farm/Agricultural setting | |
| Ohio | Dec | 2014 | Viral, unknown (S) | AGI | 2 | 0 | 0 | Commercially bottled | Unknown | Private residence |
| Oregon | Jun | 2013 | AGI | 119 | 2 | 0 | Community | Lake/Reservoir/ Impoundment | Community/Municipality | |
| Oregon | Sep | 2014 | ARI | 4 | 4 | 1 | Community | Well | Apartment/Condo | |
| Pennsylvania | Dec | 2013 | ARI | 2 | 2 | 0 | Unknown | Unknown | Hospital/Health care | |
| Pennsylvania | Feb | 2014 | ARI | 5 | 5 | 0 | Community | River/Stream | Long-term care facility | |
| Pennsylvania | Oct | 2014 |
| ARI | 2 | 2 | 1 | Community | Unknown | Long-term care facility |
| Rhode Island | Apr | 2013 | ARI | 2 | 2 | 1 | Community | Lake/Reservoir/ Impoundment | Hospital/Health care | |
| Tennessee | Jul | 2013 |
| AGI | 34 | 0 | 0 | Transient, noncommunity†††† | Spring | Camp/Cabin setting |
| Tennessee | Jun | 2014 | AGI | 12 | 0 | 0 | Nontransient, noncommunity | Well | Camp/Cabin setting; Community/Municipality | |
| Virginia | Jun | 2013 | AGI | 19 | 0 | 0 | Individual | Well | Farm/Agricultural setting | |
| West Virginia | Jan | 2014 | 4-Methylcyclo | AGI | 369 | 13 | 0 | Community | River/Stream | Community/Municipality |
| Wisconsin | Aug | 2014 |
| AGI | 3 | 0 | 0 | Nontransient, noncommunity | Other | National forest |
| Wisconsin | Sep | 2014 |
| AGI | 5 | 0 | 0 | Individual | Well | Private residence |
Abbreviations: AGI = acute gastrointestinal illness; ARI = acute respiratory illness; L. pneumophila = Legionella pneumophila; Neuro = neurologic illnesses, conditions, or symptoms (e.g., meningitis); S = suspected.
* Etiologies listed are confirmed, unless indicated as suspected. For multiple-etiology outbreaks, etiologies are listed in alphabetical order.
† The category of illness reported by ≥50% of ill respondents. All legionellosis outbreaks were categorized as ARI.
§ Value was set to “missing” in reports where zero hospitalizations were reported and the number of persons for whom information was available was also zero or for instances where reports are missing hospitalization data.
¶ Value was set to “missing” in reports where zero deaths were reported and the number of persons for whom information was available was also zero or for instances where reports are missing data on associated deaths.
** Community and noncommunity water systems are public water systems that have ≥15 service connections or serve an average of ≥25 residents for ≥60 days per year. A community water system serves year-round residents of a community, subdivision, or mobile home park. A noncommunity water system serves an institution, industry, camp, park, hotel, or business and can be nontransient or transient. Nontransient systems serve ≥25 of the same persons for ≥6 months of the year but not year-round (e.g., factories and schools) whereas transient systems provide water to places in which persons do not remain for long periods of time (e.g., restaurants, highway rest stations, and parks). Individual water systems are small systems not owned or operated by a water utility that have <15 connections or serve <25 persons.
†† Classification of all reported Giardia cases has changed from Giardia intestinalis to Giardia duodenalis to align with laboratory standards.
§§ Setting is listed as “other” because implicated facility houses both independent living and assisted living facilities.
¶¶ This count was not included in the analysis of the current report. This outbreak occurred in 2012 and was not reported in the previous drinking water outbreak report.
*** Patients’ methemoglobin levels ranged from 1.6% to 32.3%. Water was determined to be the source rather than food because all cases had direct exposure to water. Of the 14 cases, five used the water to make oatmeal or cream of wheat.
††† This report includes both community and hospital-associated cases (27 of 45 patients reported health care/hospital exposure).
§§§ This is the first drinking water–associated outbreak of this etiology reported to the National Outbreak Reporting System.
¶¶¶ Microcystin was detected in finished water sampled from a community water system; levels exceeded state thresholds and resulted in a “Do not drink” advisory.
**** Cryptosporidium was detected in water samples but not in any clinical specimens.
†††† This system was registered as a community system as a result of the outbreak investigation.
§§§§ Illnesses were associated with exposure to 4-methylcyclohexanemethanol following a documented industrial spill into water supplying a public water system. However, individual levels of exposure could not be quantified in clinical specimens. Propylene glycol phenyl ether was also present in the spill at low concentrations.
Rank order (most common to least common) of etiology, water system, water source, predominant illness, and deficiencies associated with 42 drinking water outbreaks and 1,006 outbreak-related cases of illness — United States, 2013–2014
| Characteristic/Rank | Outbreaks (N = 42) | Cases (N = 1,006) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Category | No. (%) | Category | No. (%) | |
|
| ||||
| 1 | Bacteria, | 24 (57.1) | Chemical/Toxin | 499 (49.6) |
| 2 | Parasites | 8 (19.1) | Parasites | 289 (28.7) |
| 3 | Chemical/Toxin | 4 (9.5) | Bacteria, | 130 (12.9) |
| 4 | Viruses | 3 (7.1) | Viruses | 68 (6.8) |
| 5 | Bacteria, non- | 1 (2.4) | Multiple bacteria | 12 (1.2) |
| 6 | Multiple bacteria | 1 (2.4) | Bacteria, non- | 5 (0.5) |
| 7 | Unknown | 1 (2.4) | Unknown | 3 (0.3) |
|
| ||||
| 1 | Community | 30 (71.4) | Community | 759 (75.4) |
| 2 | Noncommunity | 5 (11.9) | Individual | 124 (12.3) |
| 3 | Individual | 3 (7.1) | Noncommunity | 115 (11.4) |
| 4 | Unknown | 3 (7.1) | Unknown | 6 (0.6) |
| 5 | Bottled | 1 (2.4) | Bottled | 2 (0.2) |
|
| ||||
| 1 | Ground water | 14 (33.3) | Surface water | 795 (79.0) |
| 2 | Surface water | 14 (33.3) | Ground water | 157 (15.6) |
| 3 | Unknown | 12 (28.6) | Unknown | 39 (3.9) |
| 4 | Mixed† | 1 (2.4) | Mixed | 12 (1.2) |
| 5 | Unreported | 1 (2.4) | Unreported | 3 (0.3) |
|
| ||||
| 1 | ARI | 24 (57.1) | AGI | 862 (85.7) |
| 2 | AGI | 17 (40.5) | ARI | 130 (12.9) |
| 3 | AGI; Neuro | 1 (2.4) | AGI; Neuro | 14 (1.4) |
|
| ||||
| 1 | 23 (54.8) | Treatment not expected to remove contaminant | 485 (48.2) | |
| 2 | Unknown/Insufficient information†† | 7 (16.7) | Unknown/Insufficient information | 143 (14.2) |
| 3 | Multiple§§ | 3 (7.1) | 126 (12.5) | |
| 4 | Treatment not expected to remove contaminant¶¶ | 3 (7.1) | Treatment deficiency | 119 (11.8) |
| 5 | Untreated ground water*** | 3 (7.1) | Untreated ground water | 70 (7.0) |
| 6 | Distribution system††† | 1 (2.4) | Multiple | 42 (4.2) |
| 7 | Premises plumbing system§§§ | 1 (2.4) | Premise plumbing system | 14 (1.4) |
| 8 | Treatment deficiency¶¶¶ | 1 (2.4) | Distribution system | 7 (0.7) |
Abbreviations: AGI = acute gastrointestinal illness; ARI = acute respiratory illness; Neuro = neurologic illnesses, conditions, or symptoms (e.g., meningitis).
* Community and noncommunity water systems are public water systems that have ≥15 service connections or serve an average of ≥25 residents for ≥60 days per year. A community water system serves year-round residents of a community, subdivision, or mobile home park. A noncommunity water system serves an institution, industry, camp, park, hotel, or business and can be nontransient or transient. Nontransient systems serve ≥25 of the same persons for ≥6 months of the year but not year-round (e.g., factories and schools) whereas transient systems provide water to places in which persons do not remain for long periods of time (e.g., restaurants, highway rest stations, and parks). Individual water systems are small systems not owned or operated by a water utility that have <15 connections or serve <25 persons.
† Includes outbreaks with mixed water sources (i.e., ground water and surface water).
§ The category of illness reported by ≥50% of ill respondents; all legionellosis outbreaks were categorized as ARI.
¶ Outbreaks are assigned one or more deficiency classifications. https://www.cdc.gov/healthywater/surveillance/deficiency-classification.html.
** Deficiency 5A. Drinking water, contamination of water at points not under the jurisdiction of a water utility or at the point of use: Legionella spp. in water system, drinking water.
†† Deficiency 99. Unknown/Insufficient information.
§§ Multiple deficiency classifications were assigned to three outbreaks. One outbreak had deficiency 2, 3 one had 3, 4, and one had 5a, 7 (deficiency in building/home-specific water treatment after the water meter or property line).
¶¶ Deficiency 13a. Current treatment processes not expected to remove a chemical contaminant: ground water.
*** Deficiency 2. Drinking water, contamination of water at/in the water source, treatment facility, or distribution system: untreated ground water.
††† Deficiency 4. Drinking water, contamination of water at/in the water source, treatment facility, or distribution system: Distribution system deficiency, including storage (e.g., cross-connection, backflow, and contamination of water mains during construction or repair).
§§§ Deficiency 6. Drinking water, contamination of water at points not under the jurisdiction of a water utility or at the point of use; plumbing system deficiency after the water meter or property line (e.g., cross-connection, backflow, or corrosion products).
¶¶¶ Deficiency 3. Treatment deficiency (e.g., temporary interruption of disinfection, chronically inadequate disinfection, or inadequate or no filtration).