The bacteriological investigation of an outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease in Glasgow Royal Infirmary affecting 16 patients is described. Most of the patients had been treated in high-dependency areas on two floors of the hospital supplied by the same two air-conditioned ventilation systems. The source of infection was traced to contamination of a cooling tower from which a plume of spray discharged into the intake vents of the two ventilation systems. Rubber grommets within the cooling tower probably provided a nidus of infection there. The control and management of the outbreak are discussed: a policy of frankness about the course and progress of the investigations was adopted and helped to allay anxiety on the part of both staff and media. © 1986, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Timbury, M. C., Donaldson, J. R., Mccartney, A. C., Fallon, R. J., Sleigh, J. D., Lyon, D., … Wilson, T. S. (1986). Outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease in Glasgow Royal Infirmary: Microbiological aspects. Journal of Hygiene, 97(3), 393–403. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022172400063580
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