Cruise
Ship Water Treatment for Legionella Control and Prevention in Domestic Water
Distribution Networks.
Cruise Ship Water Treatment using Copper
Silver Ionisation to Control and Prevent Legionella bacteria.
Cruise
Ship bacteria in the water can cause
Legionnaires' disease.
A recently released World Health Organization
(WHO) literature review1 has identified over 100 disease outbreaks
associated with ships since 1970. This is probably an underestimate
because many outbreaks are not reported and some may go undetected.
Such outbreaks are of concern because of their potentially serious
health consequences and high costs to the industry. The main diseases
associated with ships are gastrointestinal disease and Legionnaires'
disease.
The passenger shipping industry (cruise ships
and ferries) has expanded considerably in recent decades. In 2000,
10 million people traveled on cruise ships. This figure is expected
to double by the year 2010.
The cargo shipping industry is also growing. It
is estimated that 1.2 million seafarers are employed on general
cargo vessels. Many spend months at sea, sometimes in remote regions
of the world. Naval vessels also carry considerable numbers of crew,
sometimes over 5,000 per ship.
Legionnaires' disease
Legionnaires' disease
is a potentially fatal form of pneumonia, first recognized in
1976. The disease is normally contracted by inhaling legionella
bacteria deep into the lungs. Legionella species can be found
in tiny droplets of water (aerosols) or in droplet nuclei (the
particles left after the water has evaporated).
The WHO review showed that over 50 incidents
of Legionnaires' disease, involving over 200
cases, were associated with ships in the past three decades.
For example, an outbreak of Legionnaires'
disease occurred on a single cruise ship in 1994: 50 passengers
were affected on nine different cruises and one passenger died.
The disease was linked to a whirlpool spa on the ship.
The problem is not restricted to passenger
ships. Surveys carried out on general cargo ships have shown drinking
water and air conditioning systems to be contaminated with Legionella
pneumophila3.
Serologic surveys of seafarers on cargo
ships have also shown that a high proportion have antibodies to
Legionella pneumophila, suggesting that those on board ships are
at increased risk of legionellosis compared with communities onshore3.
Control measures, such as proper disinfection,
filtration and storage of source water, avoidance of dead ends
in pipes and regular cleaning and disinfection of spas are therefore
required to reduce the risk of legionellosis on ships.
International
Health Regulations
The International Health Regulations (IHR),
adopted by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 1969, provide
a regulatory framework to support public health security by preventing
the international spread of infectious diseases through permanent
public health measures for travelers, cargo, and points of entry.
These regulations replaced the 1951 International Sanitary Regulations.
The purpose of the IHR is to provide the
maximum protection against the international spread of diseases
with minimum interference with world traffic.
The current requirements of the IHR relate
to provision of potable water at ports, public health inspections
of ships, proper disposal of waste from ships, appropriate facilities
for examining and isolating travelers and maintaining vector free
zones and vector surveillance.
The IHR are currently being updated. It
is proposed that the revised IHR cover both urgent and routine
public health services at ports, airports and ground crossings.
WHO
Guide to Ship Sanitation
The WHO Guide to Ship Sanitation4 is the
official global reference on health requirements for ship construction
and operation and is directly referenced in Article 14 of the
IHR.
Its purpose is to standardize the sanitary
measures taken in ships, to safeguard the health of travelers
and to prevent the spread of infection from one country to another.
The present edition of the Guide is based on the results of a
survey of 103 countries and represents a synthesis of best national
practice.
Revision
of the Guide to Ship Sanitation
The Guide was first published in 1967 and
was reprinted with minor amendments in 1987. The construction,
design and size of ships have changed dramatically since the 1960s
and the greatly increased level of transport by ships poses new
hazards (e.g. Legionnaires' disease) that were not foreseen when
the 1967 Guide was published.
Therefore, WHO is now updating the Guide
in close collaboration with the International Labour Organization
(ILO) and the International Maritime Organization (IMO).
A meeting was held in Miami, United States
on 3-4 October 2001 to discuss and recommend the proposed contents
of the revised Guide. Participants represented the ship building
industry, cruise ship operators, seafarers associations, collaborating
member states for the IHR, Port State Control, Port Health Authorities
and other regulatory agencies attended. Experts from Australia,
Brazil, Canada, Egypt, Finland, India, Morocco, the Netherlands,
Norway, Russia, South Africa, Thailand, the United Kingdom and
the United States are involved in the revision project.
Recommendations
on the revised Guide
The meeting's participants recommended that the
revised Guide should:
Apply to all ships including passenger ships,
general cargo vessels, fishing vessels, naval vessels and tankers;
Cover preventive environmental health management
including water supply at port, water production, treatment and
distribution on ship, swimming and spa pools, waste disposal,
food safety and vermin and vector control; and
Contain concluding chapters on disease surveillance,
outbreak investigation, and routine inspection and audit.
The revised Guide will be based on a critical
review of available evidence, including experience regarding effectiveness
and feasibility of preventative and remedial measures.
Further reading
1. World Health Organization. Sustainable Development
and Healthy Environments. Sanitation on Ships. Compendium of outbreaks
of food borne and waterborne disease and Legionnaires' disease associated
with ships, 1970-2000. WHO//WSH/01.4.
2. Paris Memorandum of Understanding on Port State
Control, Blue Book. 2000.
3. Temeshnikova ND, Brudny PA, Marakusha BI, Tartaknvskii
IS and Prosorovskii SV. The presence of legionella spp in the water
system of ships. In Proceedings of the 11th meeting of the European
Working Group on Legionella Infections. Norway, June 1996.
4. Lamoureux V B. Guide to Ship Sanitation. WHO.
1967.
All WHO Press Releases, Fact Sheets and Features
as well as other information on this subject can be obtained on
Internet on the WHO home page: http://www.who.int
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