| Literature DB >> 30513967 |
Athena Mavridou1, Olga Pappa2,3, Olga Papatzitze4,5, Chrysa Dioli6, Anastasia Maria Kefala7, Panagiotis Drossos8, Apostolos Beloukas9,10.
Abstract
A growing number of people undertake international travel, and yet faster growth of such travel is expected in the tropics. Information on the hazards presented by pool and hot spring waters in tropical countries is very limited. This review aims to collate available information on pool water quality, alongside data on cases and outbreaks associated with swimming in pools in tropical regions affecting both local populations and travellers. Bacteria species commonly causing cases and outbreaks in the tropics as well as elsewhere in the world were excluded, and the review focuses on studies related to pathogens that, with the exception of Cryptosporidium, are unusual in more temperate climates. Studies concerning subtropical countries were included in the light of climate change. Diseases transmitted by vectors breeding in poorly maintained, neglected or abandoned pools were also included. 83 studies dealing with Microsporidia, Leptospira spp., Schistosomas spp., Cryptosporidium spp., Acanthamoeba spp., Naegleria spp., Clostridium trachomatis, viruses, and vectors breeding in swimming pool and hot tub waters, and fulfilling predefined criteria, have been included in our survey of the literature. In conclusion, prevention strategies for pool safety in the tropics are imperative. Public health authorities need to provide guidance to westerners travelling to exotic destinations on how to protect their health in swimming pools.Entities:
Keywords: infectious diseases; pool assessment; subtropics; swimming pools; tropics
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30513967 PMCID: PMC6313699 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15122730
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Map of the world indicating the tropical and subtropical zones.
Assessments of swimming pools (SPs) located in tropical and subtropical countries.
| Location/Country | Positive Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| North Africa, Egypt | The authors suggest artificial plastic SPs as a prophylactic measure against infection with schistosomiasis in developing countries. | [ |
| North Africa, Assiut Town, Egypt | In a survey of 2 SPs, which included 50 water samples | [ |
| North Africa, Alexandria, Egypt | Assessment of the environmental and health aspects of some SPs. Presence of pathogens indicated. | [ |
| North Africa, Alexandria, Egypt | Assessment of 5 SPs, 30 water samples. Compliance of pool water with regulations regarding bacterial indicators was 56.7%. In 10% of the samples | [ |
| Middle East, Ein Feshka, Dead Sea, Israel | Medical report of 10 cases of | [ |
| Middle East, West Bank, Palestine | An assessment of 58 water samples, collected from 46 SPs. All unacceptable according to regulations. 21/23 water samples were positive for | [ |
| Middle East, Amman, Jordan | Assessment of 85 SPs in Amman. Compliance of the pools’ water with the microbial parameters was 56.5%. | [ |
| Middle East, Nablus district, Palestine | In a survey of 3 SPs, 50 keratinophilic fungal species were recovered. The most frequently isolated species were | [ |
| Sub Saharan Africa, Ghana | In a survey of 7 SPs, faecal coliforms, | [ |
| Asia, Guangzhou, China | A survey of 39 municipal SPs revealed protozoa (12.8%), | [ |
| Asia, Ahwaz Iran | In a survey of 10 indoor SPs, 593 water and environmental samples (shower areas, dressing rooms, pool walls, slippers) revealed 372 saprophytic fungi species and 32 yeasts. The most common were | [ |
| Asia, Shahrekord City, Iran | In a seasonal assessment of 2 indoor SPs (459 pool water, shower & dressing room samples) faecal coliform | [ |
List of surveillance studies of swimming pools (SPs), and respective cases and outbreaks of infections associated with swimming pools and hot springs in tropical and subtropical countries.
|
| |||
|
|
|
|
|
| Rural areas, Bangladesh | Report of an incident of a traveller from Bangladesh returning to Paris, France | A man suffered from bilateral keratitis after bathing in a rural pond. The patient was found to be infected with a microsporidial parasite belonging to the genus | [ |
| Taipei, Taiwan | Retrospective study of patients diagnosed with microsporidial keratitis | All patients were known to have contracted microsporidial keratitis after bathing in hot springs. | [ |
|
| |||
|
|
|
|
|
| Dogon Valley, Mali | Study of an acute schistosomiasis in Belgian travellers returning from Dogon Valley, Mali | 8/13 travellers infected with | [ |
| Belo Horizonte, State of Minas Gerais, Brazil | Study of an outbreak of acute schistosomiasis in a holiday resort at an endemic area | 17 cases infected with | [ |
| São João del Rei, Brazil | Study of an outbreak where an area became infected due to influx of infected workers from endemic areas, who infected water sources, including SPs | 50 workers infected in the pool with | [ |
| Upper Benue Valley, North Cameroon | Study of the risk factors for human schistosomiasis in the local population | High prevalence of the disease depending on, among other factors, the intensity of contact with the water. | [ |
| Dogon Valley, Mali | Study of an outbreak in two groups of 30 Dutch travellers returning from Dogon area of Mali where they swam in fresh water pools | 29 infected with | [ |
|
| |||
|
|
|
|
|
| Beijing, China | Survey of 35 randomly selected hotel SPs, 60 water samples | 16.7% positive for | [ |
| Various areas, Philippines | Survey of water sources including SPs | 33% positive for | [ |
| Broome, Kimberley region, Western Australia | Investigation of outbreak of cryptosporidiasis | 11/18 cases swam in the public pool. In faecal and pool water samples | [ |
|
| |||
|
|
|
|
|
| Mexico City, Mexico | Survey of six swimming pools | All SPs were positive for | [ |
| Taichung, Taiwan | Diagnosis of fatality | One fatal case of meningoencephalitis caused by | [ |
| Alexandria, Egypt | Survey of two SPs | Both SPs were positive for | [ |
| Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | Survey of 14 pools. Four water samples and six samples using swabs were collected from each | [ | |
| Mexico City, Mexico | Survey of three physiotherapy tubs and 11 SPs | All therapy tubs were positive for | [ |
| Brazil, Porto Alegre | Survey of 65 water samples from SPs | [ | |
| Egypt, various locations | Survey in various waters including two SPs | 49.2% of pool water samples were positive for heat-tolerant | [ |
| Porto Alegre, Brazil | Survey in pools and spas | 8/72 water samples were positive for | [ |
| Brasilia District, Brazil | Study of the pathogenicity of strains from environmental sources | 4/4 | [ |
| Ahwaz, Iran | Survey of 110 water and soil samples including four SPs | In 71.6% of water samples | [ |
| Various areas, Philippines | Survey of rivers, ponds, dispensers, wells, taps, natural lakes and SPs | 33.3% of SP water samples were positive for | [ |
| Adana, Afyon, Kutahya, Mersin and Nigde provinces, Turkey | Survey of hot springs and SPs | 42% of water samples were positive for | [ |
| Malaysia Peninsular | A survey of recreational lakes, streams, SPs | [ | |
|
| |||
|
|
|
|
|
| Various places, Dominican Republic | Study of leptospirosis in travellers | A German woman developed leptospirosis after swimming in a chlorinated SP. | [ |
|
| |||
|
|
|
|
|
| Queensland, Australia | Study of a primary school outbreak of pharyngo-conjunctival fever attributed to swimming in the SP of a school camp | 40% of the students infected by | [ |
| Pretoria, South Africa | A study of the risk of infection of | [ | |
| Porto Alegre, Brazil | Survey of SPs for the detection of adenoviruses in | 16 | [ |
| South Africa | Investigation of an outbreak related to swimming in the school camp pool | 90 children & the SP water were positive for | [ |
| Taiwan, various areas | A study to determine the prevalence of | [ | |
| Beijing, China | A study of an outbreak of pharyngoconjunctival fever related to swimming in a University SP | 50 patients used the same SP. | [ |
|
| |||
|
|
|
|
|
| Malindi, Kenya | A systematic review of the factors contributing to urban transmission of malaria in Sub-Saharan Africa | [ | |
| Malindi, Kenya | A study on larvae surveys in urban environments and the productivity of unused SPs in relation to other habitats | Unused SPs accounted for 42.7% of all 110 positive habitats. | [ |
| Malindi, Kenya | A study on the abundance of immature | Unused SPs comprised 21.7% of water bodies serving as habitats for immature | [ |
| Dakar, Senegal | An entomological survey on the determinants of malaria transmission in the city of Dakar | 355 private properties were visited, including SPs. | [ |
| Sao Jose de Rio Preto, Brazil | A study on the evaluation of two sweeping methods for estimating the number of immature | [ | |