Legionnaires' disease confirmed in Dartmouth by Health Authority - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Legionnaires' disease confirmed in Dartmouth by Health Authority

A resident of a multi-unit apartment building tested positive for legionella, and three other cases are being investigated, the N.S. Health Authority said in a statement released Wednesday.

1 confirmed case, 3 others being investigated

This 2009 colorized 8000X electron micrograph image provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows a large grouping of Gram-negative Legionella pneumophila bacteria. (Janice Haney Carr/Centers for Disease Control/Associated Press)

Residents of a Dartmouth apartment building are sleeping uneasily tonight after learning that one resident has Legionnaires' disease and several others are sick.

"lt never dawned on us that we might be sick because there was a problem in the building. We didn't hear about this until today. We just thought we had aflu bug," said Nancy McLean.

"It's unnerving. It's upsetting. It's scary."

The Nova Scotia Health Authority said three unconfirmed cases are being investigated.

The apartment building held a meeting to discuss the situation today, but McLeandidn't hear about it. She only found out about the outbreak when she left her home at 5 p.m.

It's unnerving. It's upsetting. It's scary.- Nancy McLean

"Everybody must be upset tonight and find it hard to sleep. I know I'm going to be pretty uneasy when I go to bed tonight," McLean said.

A severe form of pneumonia, Legionnaires' is contracted after a person breathes mists that come from a water source contaminated with the Legionella bacteria.

Symptoms include fever, chills, dry cough, muscle aches, headache, loss of appetite, diarrhea and pneumonia.

All four individuals live in the same building and are being treated at hospital. The authority won't give theaddress of the building.

"Most people have little or no risk of catching the disease, which is not contagious and can't be spread from person to person," said Dr. Gaynor Watson-Creed, Nova Scotia Medical Officer of Health.

"The source of this small cluster appears to be localized and it's unlikely that the broader public is at risk. At the same time, it's important that people are aware and know the symptoms."

Antibiotics are used to treat Legionnella, which can be found in the soil and can make its way through AC units, showers, and whirlpools.