occurrence in reduced-occupancy buildings in 11 cities during the COVID-19 pandemic
In spring 2020, numerous buildings were closed or operated at reduced occupancies to slow the spread of COVID-19. An unintended consequence of these social distancing measures was a reduction in water demand in many buildings. Concerns arose that contaminants associated with water stagnation, such a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environmental science water research & technology 2023-10, Vol.9 (11), p.2847-2865 |
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Zusammenfassung: | In spring 2020, numerous buildings were closed or operated at reduced occupancies to slow the spread of COVID-19. An unintended consequence of these social distancing measures was a reduction in water demand in many buildings. Concerns arose that contaminants associated with water stagnation, such as
Legionella pneumophila
, could become prevalent. To investigate the potential public health risk associated with
L. pneumophila
, samples from 26 reduced-occupancy buildings in 11 cities in the United States, Canada, and Switzerland were analyzed for
L. pneumophila
using liquid culture (Legiolert,
n
= 258) and DNA-based methods (qPCR/ddPCR,
n
= 138).
L. pneumophila
culture-positivity was largely associated with five buildings, each of which had specific design or operational deficiencies commonly associated with
L. pneumophila
occurrence. Samples from buildings with free chlorine residual disinfection had higher culture-positivity (37%) than samples from buildings with chloramine (1%). Additionally, 78% of culture-positive samples occurred when the disinfectant residual was ≤0.1 mg L
−1
Cl
2
and only three free chlorine samples were culture-positive when the disinfectant residual was >0.2 mg L
−1
as Cl
2
. Although overall sample positivity using culture- and DNA-based methods was equivalent (34%
vs.
35%), there was disagreement between the methods in 13% of samples (
n
= 18 of 138). Few buildings reported any water management activities, and
L. pneumophila
concentrations in flushed samples were occasionally greater than in first-draw samples. This study provides insight into how building plumbing characteristics and water management practices contribute to
L. pneumophila
occurrence during low water use periods and can inform targeted prevention and mitigation efforts.
Legionella pneumophila
was quantified during the COVID-19 pandemic in 26 buildings in three countries to identify factors that influenced positivity. |
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ISSN: | 2053-1400 2053-1419 |
DOI: | 10.1039/d3ew00278k |