logo
Legionnaires disease outbreak has sickened 40 people in Ontario. Here is what you need to know

Legionnaires disease outbreak has sickened 40 people in Ontario. Here is what you need to know

CTV News4 days ago
This 2009 colorized 8000X electron micrograph image provided by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows a large grouping of gram-negative Legionella pneumophila bacteria. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Janice Haney Carr)
A recent outbreak of Legionnaires disease in London, Ont. is raising the profile of the bacterial infection, with some wondering whether it can pose a risk to the greater public.
The illness, which is caused by Legionella bacteria, manifests as a severe form of pneumonia. Common symptoms include fever, cough and shortness of breath.
Infectious disease physician Dr. Isaac Bogoch explains the bacterial infection lives in nature, which means it can be found in soil and water. However, he stresses that the illness doesn't spread from person to person and can only be contracted by breathing it in by way of human-made systems.
'This is usually acquired by inhaling the bacteria,' he tells CTV News. 'You get sporadic cases, but oftentimes you can get outbreaks. And the reason you get outbreaks is sometimes the bacteria can get into HVAC systems, water coolers and water towers.'
How common is it?
While rare, there have been cases of the illness spreading through indoor environments like hotels or offices, via HVAC systems, cooling towers or air conditioning.
Data released by Public Health Ontario (PHO) in May showed that there were 363 confirmed cases of the virus in 2024, which was roughly in line with the annual average of 354.
The rates across much of the GTA were all under 1.9 cases per 100,000 people. n 2024, the Middlesex-London Health Unit (MLHU) reported the highest rate of legionellosis at about 7.7 cases per 100,000 people.
How is it treated?
The infection is treated with the same common antibiotics used for pneumonia.
When a case of Legionella is identified, there will be a public health effort to trace where it was potentially acquired. This is to verify if there are other cases and what potential common source led to the outbreak.
'If there are people in the same place like a shopping centre, hotel or church, that are all getting pneumonia, you can start to look for potential contaminated air conditioning, HVAC systems, etcetera,' Bogoch says.
He adds that there currently isn't an outbreak of Legionnaires disease in Toronto. While the illness appears infrequently, Bogoch says it's also not uncommon for cases to occur.
The risk of Legionella is especially high for older adults, smokers, those with chronic lung disease or anyone who is immunocompromised.
When does it occur?
Residents can be exposed to the Legionella bacteria at any point but Public Health Ontario says that most cases occur between June and September, with July seeing the largest volume of cases.
PHO says that last July the positivity rate peaked at 6.4 per cent before trending downward. It says that the proportion of confirmed cases that resulted in hospitalization in 2024 was 76.6 per cent. About five per cent of cases resulted in death in 2024, according to PHO.
What happened in London?
The health unit in London, Ont., said this week that more than 40 cases of legionella have been confirmed within a six-kilometre radius, with one case resulting in death.
The Middlesex-London Health Unit has said it doesn't know the source of the outbreak but still considers the risk to the public to be 'low.'
'Most people who are exposed to legionella bacteria will not become infected or develop symptoms. Risk factors for Legionnaire's disease including being elderly, immunocompromised or having underlying lung conditions,' a spokesperson told CTV News earlier this week.
Why is it called Legionnaires disease?
The name Legionella stems from when the bacterial infection was first characterized in 1976, after many people became ill during a Legion convention in Philadelphia, leading to an epidemiologic investigation.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wildfires show why CBC needs public safety mandate: researcher
Wildfires show why CBC needs public safety mandate: researcher

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Wildfires show why CBC needs public safety mandate: researcher

OTTAWA – The wildfires that are flaring up across Canada again are one of the reasons public safety should be added to CBC/Radio-Canada's mandate, a new report from a research centre at McGill University argues. The report says other public media around the world are incorporating national emergency preparedness and crisis response into their role, and recommends that aspect of the CBC's mandate be formalized and strengthened. 'For us in Canada, wildfires and floods have sort of crept up on us in the last five years as part of an everyday reality,' said Jessica Johnson, a senior fellow at McGill University's Centre for Media, Technology and Democracy, who co-authored the report released Wednesday. 'They were always a reality if you were living in heavily forested areas. But now the smoke from some parts is affecting the whole country and even our neighbours.' On Monday and Tuesday, special air-quality statements caused by wildfire smoke were in effect in many areas of the country, with the government warning residents to consider limiting time outdoors and watch for symptoms of smoke exposure. Thousands of people in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta have been forced out of their homes this spring and summer due to the wildfires. The report says previous research that looked at false information during wildfires in Canada found that on social media, 'influential right-wing and anti-establishment groups blamed arson by green terrorists and the government for the fires, which further fuelled a distrust in the media in the moments when accurate information was critically important.' Johnson said in the interview that 'if there's misinformation online that's telling people it's just a hoax, you don't need to evacuate, that puts people's lives at risk.' There are also wider concerns about misinformation. Facebook, a platform many have come to rely on for information, blocks news content in Canada, while some Canadians are increasingly turning to generative AI for information, even though such systems can make mistakes and provide false information. 'We've lost a lot of the healthy sources in addition to the arrival of the unreliable sources of information,' Johnson said. While some countries in recent years have been changing the mandates of their public media in response to the climate crisis, she explained, others have been doing it in response to security concerns — for instance, Baltic countries looking at their proximity to Russia. The head of the recent public inquiry into foreign interference concluded that misinformation and disinformation are an existential threat to Canada's democracy, Johnson noted. 'So you start putting it all together and you realize public media starts to look not like a nice to have. It starts to like a part of your communications infrastructure,' Johnson said. During this year's federal election, the Liberals promised to increase the CBC's funding by an initial $150 million annually, and to make a number of changes to the its mandate. That includes adding 'the clear and consistent transmission of life-saving information during emergencies.' Johnson said it's important to ensure that the CBC isn't just repeating information provided by the government, but that it's able to question and hold the government to account. Another key element is ensuring the public broadcaster has the ability to do the work it's tasked with, especially at the local level. Johnson gave the example of residents in an area facing a wildfire, who should be able to find information about potential evacuations affecting their community, instead of media reports being focused on broadly informing Canadians across the country about the fire. She noted there are parts of the country where, when it comes to media presence, the CBC 'is kind of the only game in town or in the nearest town.' Johnson said one option is for the CBC to partner with local independent journalists, a model which has been implemented in Britain and 'could be a great model for Canada.' Changing technology also means there are technical issues to consider — internet and cellphone networks can go down, and many people don't have traditional TV or radios anymore. 'I think it's a government responsibility to do that work, whether it involves research, and say, are we actually prepared, and who needs to be involved in a conversation about making sure that we're prepared?' The CRTC, Canada's broadcast and telecom regulator, announced Tuesday that it's launching a consultation on how to improve Canada's public alert system. It requires cellphone, cable and satellite providers, and TV and radio broadcasters to distribute emergency alerts. Johnson's report concludes that Canada's emergency preparedness needs are changing, and that means 'CBC-Radio Canada may need to be structured to serve the country in ways it hasn't had to in the past.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 16, 2025.

Opinion: Ottawa is underfunding pharmacare and dental care, exacerbating current inequities
Opinion: Ottawa is underfunding pharmacare and dental care, exacerbating current inequities

National Post

time2 hours ago

  • National Post

Opinion: Ottawa is underfunding pharmacare and dental care, exacerbating current inequities

Article content These principles should mean that any Canadian who requires a medicine is able to access it when they need it without being restricted by unnecessary rules and regulations, inhibited by cost or rationed according to where they live. Article content However, diabetes medication coverage is limited to predominantly older, inexpensive drugs. Newer drugs, such tirzepatide (which directly treats Type 2 diabetes) and finerenone (which addresses some of its most serious side effects) are excluded — despite having been shown to reduce the risk of heart attacks, strokes and end-stage kidney disease in diabetics. Article content Furthermore, only British Columbia, Manitoba, Prince Edward Island and the Yukon have so far signed the necessary bilateral agreements with Ottawa for national pharmacare. Alberta and Quebec have indicated that they have no interest in the program, although both want their share of the money dangled by the federal government. Article content When national pharmacare coverage is only available in some jurisdictions and restricted to older, inexpensive drugs, patients living in provinces that refuse to join the program will have better access to medications than those in jurisdictions that have signed on. This will not only perpetuate current differences between provincial drug plans, it will exacerbate them. Article content The situation could become even worse if more drug types are eventually included in national pharmacare and employers see the expansion as a chance to save money by cancelling employees' private drug insurance coverage. Article content As presently implemented, dental care and pharmacare satisfy few Canadians' expectations or needs. Ottawa should be transparent with Canadians about its objectives for the CDCP and national pharmacare. Article content Instead of funding a national pharmacare program that fails to fill the gaps, a better way forward would be for Ottawa to transfer that money to provincial governments. The provinces should then use those funds to level up their coverage to that of the best available provincial plan in the country, and exempt lower-income Canadians from co-payments. Article content Article content Article content

Equipment failure at Winnipeg clinic caused blood plasma donor's kidney injury, lawsuit alleges
Equipment failure at Winnipeg clinic caused blood plasma donor's kidney injury, lawsuit alleges

CBC

time2 hours ago

  • CBC

Equipment failure at Winnipeg clinic caused blood plasma donor's kidney injury, lawsuit alleges

A Winnipeg man who donated blood plasma at a plasma clinic has filed a lawsuit claiming he suffered a serious kidney injury after something went wrong with the machine used in the procedure to withdraw blood. The plaintiff alleges the issue happened at the Grifols plasma collection facility, operated by the Ontario-based Canadian Plasma Resources, on Taylor Avenue in Winnipeg. It gives members of the public an honorarium payment for donating blood plasma, according to his lawsuit, filed July 9 with Manitoba Court of King's Bench. On July 15, 2023, the now 43-year-old donor went to the clinic for what the lawsuit describes as a routine plasma donation through a procedure called plasmapheresis, which involves blood passing through medical equipment to separate the plasma from the red blood cells. The red blood cells are then returned to the donor, along with replacement fluids. The procedure took about 90 minutes, and the donor left the Grifols facility around 10:45 a.m., the lawsuit says. Around noon, he began to feel ill and experienced symptoms such as blood in his urine and flu-like symptoms, it says. He called Canadian Plasma Resources to ask if the symptoms were anything he should be concerned about, but was told they were unaware of any issue that would cause them, his lawsuit says. He was advised to drink fluids and seek medical attention if the symptoms worsened. By shortly after 1 p.m., the donor began having significant abdominal pain, which continued to intensify, his lawsuit says. He was taken by ambulance to St. Boniface Hospital, where medical tests were done, including blood work, an ultrasound, a CT scan and urinalysis, to determine the source of his symptoms, the court document says. At the hospital, the donor got an email from Canadian Plasma Resources informing him that a "machine error" caused some red blood cells removed during the procedure to be "broken" and erroneously returned into his body along with the plasma, the claim says. It says he was advised the error may cause him to experience symptoms such as "blood in the urine, lower flank pain, shortness of breath, fever, weakness, confusion, or yellowing of the skin." Acute kidney injury: lawsuit The medical testing determined the donor had suffered an acute kidney injury as a result of the error, the claim alleges. He is suing Canadian Plasma Resources, which operates as Grifols, as well as three Grifols employees identified as health-care professionals. The allegations have not been tested in court, and the defendants have not filed statements of defence. The lawsuit says the man continued to experience fatigue and low energy that made him unable to return to work for about a month, after which he went back to work gradually. He continued suffering fatigue and low energy for about six months, the claim says. It also alleges he has suffered "non-reversible and permanent injuries" from the acute kidney injury, which may result in chronic kidney disease in his lifetime. The lawsuit seeks damages for pain, suffering, loss of enjoyment of life and lost income, among other damages. It alleges the employees at Grifols working at the time of the machine error failed to ensure the medical equipment was working safely and properly, and failed to recognize the equipment was malfunctioning. The employees also failed to advise the donor in a timely way that there was an error during his procedure and that he might experience complications, the claim alleges. CBC reached out to the plaintiff and his lawyer, as well as the defendants Grifols and Canadian Plasma Resources, but did not receive comment on the lawsuit before deadline. Grifols' website says plasma, the straw-coloured liquid portion of blood in which blood cells are suspended, is "used to manufacture life-saving and life-changing therapies." It says tens of thousands of Canadians benefit from plasma therapies used to treat a range of medical issues, such as immune deficiencies, respiratory disorders, and surgical bleeding, among others.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store