Legionella plan is not the same as a water management plan
Don’t get caught in thinking a Legionella Plan is the same as a Water Management Plan for a facility. State and accreditation inspectors know the difference, even though it may be slight, they can issue a violation for the mistaken identity. For example, a hospital that had its cooling towers sampled for legionella bacteria on a regular basis felt comfort in thinking the safety issue was covered. An arriving inspector asked for the facility’s Water Management Plan and the engineering manager gladly turned over the cooling tower sampling documentation to satisfy the inquiry. Soon the facility discovered that cooling tower samples are not a Water Management Plan and a violation was issued.
Everyone, especially facility directors, infection preventionists, building managers and compliance supervisors, should be interested in stopping legionella and the possibility of a Legionnaires’ disease case in their facility. Most people assume a Legionella Plan is the same as a Water Management Plan, or at least both have the same goal. But, that’s not the case.
A Water Management Plan encompasses much more than just sampling for Legionella in cooling towers or in other water devices or features in the facility. A “plan” in this sense is meant to include a group of people in each facility that not only understand water usage and flows, but they must also be stakeholders in taking corrective action and understanding occupant health conditions. A Water Management Plan is not just a preventative maintenance task on a schedule that can be simply checked off on a form. This plan requires a committee that must review, understand, support, and implement an active protocol for managing water flow within each building.
So, what is the difference between a Legionella plan and a water management plan?
To start, legionella is one type of waterborne pathogen. Strictly focusing on controlling one type of bacteria to keep a facility safe is not adequate. A Water Management Plan is much broader and includes a special committee, full understanding of the water flow in the facility and identifying critical inspection points. Unfortunately, most just hear of Legionella cases and feel that should be the sole focus of their compliance plan.
Why so many Legionella cases in the news?
Since Legionnaires’ disease is a severe form of pneumonia — lung inflammation usually caused by infection, many hospitals test pneumonia patients for the bacteria. As more is learned about legionella and testing availability is expanded, doctors are requesting pneumonia patients be tested routinely.
Both the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) and American Thoracic Society (ATS) support performing a Legionella pneumophila urine antigen test for patients with any of the following: “severe pneumonia requiring intensive care unit (ICU) admission, failure of outpatient antibiotics, active alcohol abuse, history of travel within the previous two weeks, or pleural effusion.” With the increased testing of pneumonia patients comes an increase in detection of legionella cases.
Adding to the increase in cases is a requirement that the diagnosed legionella case must be reported to a local county health department. The designated county health department then investigates the case to determine a likely cause of the legionella exposure. More people find out about the case and news agencies report it. This combination of testing, investigating and reporting has had a synergistic effect on why incidents are more prevalent in the news.
Costly sampling mistakes Participation Programs
Understanding the testing and analysis for determining if Legionella or other harmful bacteria is present in a building’s water system is important because improper testing can lead to costly false positives.
For example, a man is diagnosed with legionella and the County Health Department begins an investigation of where the man has been in the last two weeks. One of his stops was swimming at a local health club. The management of the health club’s pool was directed to have the water tested. The environmental company responding to the call performed a test that allows for a quick determination of whether legionella is present vs. offering to perform a full culture test of the water to determine a more precise count of legionella present. The quick test revealed “YES” legionella was present, and the recommendation included closing the facility, emptying the pool, washing the pool with muriatic acid, filling the pool, emptying the pool, washing again with muriatic acid and repeating these same steps three times. After receiving this news, the pool management team called another environmental company for a second opinion and they recommended a full culture test. The full culture test showed the pool water was indeed safe and the actual quantity of legionella bacteria was significantly below established limits.
Similar cases involving government buildings in Illinois have occurred due to false positives that lead to newspaper and television news stories that caused undue alarm in building occupants. Full culture tests proved the building’s water system was safe, but the news stories already had their negative effect and the good news was of no interest to the same news outlets.
Taking the necessary steps
Developing a Water Management Plan instead of a mere Legionella Plan is more beneficial to keeping a building’s occupants safe. The Water Management Plan requires a larger stakeholder involvement in managing the safety of the facility’s water condition. The Water Management Plan must include these steps at a minimum:
- Water flow diagrams
Unlike a Legionella Plan, a Water Management Plan takes into consideration all waterborne pathogens and not just legionella. The plan must include a water flow diagram to follow the water as it progresses through the facility. The purpose is for everyone involved to understand the usage and treatment points as water is delivered through the facility.
- Committee
A committee must be selected that include an infectionpreventionist to determine risks, administration representative that can authorize costs, and someone familiar with the plumbing systems in the building.
- Inspection points & plan
Plans set up by many consulting companies include legionella testing at various intervals. This may not be necessary; a Water Management Plan should include cooling tower sampling, but many other aspects of the plan do not. Inspection points identified in the plan are critical to understanding the safety of water systems – monitoring temperatures and pH levels, flushing protocols, piping changes, and disinfectants such as free chlorine. Clinical staff should also be included in preparing the action steps needed when a legionella case is discovered.
- Documenting
Plans set up by many consulting companies include legionella testing at various intervals. This may not be necessary; a Water Management Plan should include cooling tower sampling, but many other aspects of the plan do not. Inspection points identified in the plan are critical to understanding the safety of water systems – monitoring temperatures and pH levels, flushing protocols, piping changes, and disinfectants such as free chlorine. Clinical staff should also be included in preparing the action steps needed when a legionella case is discovered.