Legionnaires Disease At Atlanta Hospital

An outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease has been confirmed at Atlanta, Georgia’s Grady Memorial Hospital. Water tests confirmed today that two units at Grady Memorial Hospital were the source of the bacteria that caused Legionnaires. Four patients have been sickened by the disease.
A Grady spokesman claimed this was the first time in Grady’s history that the Downtown Atlanta hospital has been the source for disease in patients. The two Grady patient units consisting of and 80 beds have been closed since last week. The Grady spokesman said crews are treating these units and additional floors and will continue testing throughout the hospital.
Three of the four patients have responded to antibiotics and have been discharged. The fourth is still receiving treatment. An additional 50 patients have been tested for the disease, but those tests were negative.
Legionnaires disease is named for an outbreak at a 1976 convention of the American Legion in Philadelphia. It is not spread from one person to another. People get the disease when they breathe in a mist or vapor that’s contaminated with the naturally occurring bacteria.
A type of pneumonia, Legionnaires’ disease can cause death in up to 5 percent to 30 percent of cases.

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