Epidemic Legionnaires' Disease
Airborne Transmission Down a Chimney
- Jeffrey D. Band, MD;
- Martin LaVenture, MPH;
- Jeffrey P. Davis, MD;
- George F. Mallison, MPH;
- Peter Skaliy, PhD;
- Peggy S. Hayes;
- Wendy L. Schell;
- Hank Weiss, MS, MPH;
- Daniel J. Greenberg;
- David W. Fraser, MD
Abstract
Between June 18 and July 9, 1979, Legionnaires' disease (LD) developed in 13 persons who had visited a hotel complex in Wisconsin. All had visited the part of the hotel that contains the restaurants and meeting rooms (building A). Legionnaires' disease occurred in 1% who had been exclusively in the meeting rooms and in 0.1% who had eaten only at the hotel restaurants. Furthermore, 1.5% exposed to meeting room 1 and none of those exposed only to the other meeting rooms had LD. Legionella pneumophila was isolated from water in the cooling tower on top of building A. Located within 5 m downwind of the cooling-tower exhaust, a chimney with an open damper allowed cooling-tower exhaust (as demonstrated by air tracer studies) to enter meeting room 1 via the fireplace. Although cases did not occur after the cooling-tower water was treated by continuous hyperchlorination and the chimney was sealed, a seven-day lag occurred between treatment and elimination of the organism from the tower water.
(JAMA 1981;245:2404-2407)
Footnotes
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Presented in part at the 13th annual meeting of the Society for Epidemiologic Research, Minneapolis, June 17, 1980.
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Reprint requests to Center for Disease Control, Bacterial Diseases Division, Bureau of Epidemiology, Atlanta, GA 30333 (Dr Band).








