Low Efficacy of Periodical Thermal Shock for Long-Term Control of Legionella spp. in Hot Water System of Hotels

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Abstract

Different guidelines and regulations for the prevention of legionellosis in public facilities include the recommendation of a periodical thermal shock in the hot water system. The purpose of this study was to assess the efficacy of periodical thermal shocks along a 1-year period on the presence of Legionella spp. in the domestic hot water system of hotels. The Legionella testing results from the period January–December 2019 coming from a group of 77 hotel facilities in the Balearic Islands (Spain) conducting periodical thermal shocks were analyzed. A second group of 44 hotels operating without periodical thermal shocks was used for a comparative analysis. In the facilities where the periodical thermal shock was performed, 16.0% of the results (429 hot water samples collected) were positive for Legionella spp., compared to 21.1% (298 samples), where periodical thermal shock was not performed. Overall, in the thermal shock group, 32.5% of the sites presented at least 1 positive sample along the period of study versus 45.5% in the control group. None of these differences was statistically significant (p-value > 0.05). These findings suggest that the efficacy of regular thermal shock for long-term control of Legionella spp. in domestic hot water systems of hotels is low.

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Molina, J. J., Bennassar, M., Palacio, E., & Crespi, S. (2022). Low Efficacy of Periodical Thermal Shock for Long-Term Control of Legionella spp. in Hot Water System of Hotels. Pathogens, 11(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens11020152

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