Abstract

In 2008, the European Surveillance Scheme for Travel Associated Legionnaires Disease (EWGLINET) received reports of 866 cases of travel-associated Legionnaires disease, 42 of whom were reported to have died. 824 of the cases were classified as confirmed and 42 were presumptive. As in previous years, a very low proportion of clinical isolates were obtained (63 cases, 7.3%). Males outnumbered females by 2.8:1 in the 2008 dataset and had a median age of 60 years compared with women, whose median age was 63 years. Travel outside Europe was reported for 12% of the cases. The scheme identified 108 new clusters in 2008. Sixteen were located in countries outside EWGLINET and 38 (35.2%) involved only one case from each reporting country, and would not ordinarily have been detected by national surveillance schemes alone. The largest cluster (six cases) was associated with travel to Spain. The 108 clusters were associated with 144 environmental investigations, 35 of which were at re-offending sites, (sites which had previously been investigated and where additional cases had subsequently occurred). At 61 (42.1%) of the sites Legionella species were detected. The names of 12 sites were published on the EWGLINET website.

Highlights

  • EWGLINET is a diseasespecific network which aims to detect clusters of Legionnaires’ disease associated with accommodation sites across Europe. It was established in 1987 by EWGLI in order to better protect the health of travellers by improving the detection and control of sources of infection in European countries

  • This paper provides results and commentary on cases of travel-associated Legionnaires’ disease reported to EWGLINET with onset in 2008

  • A total of 866 cases were reported to the EWGLINET surveillance scheme with onset during 2008

Read more

Summary

Introduction

EWGLINET (the European Surveillance Scheme for Travel Associated Legionnaires’ Disease) is a diseasespecific network which aims to detect clusters of Legionnaires’ disease associated with accommodation sites across Europe. It was established in 1987 by EWGLI (the European Working Group for Legionella Infections) in order to better protect the health of travellers by improving the detection and control of sources of infection in European countries. In 2002, EWGLI introduced The European Guidelines for Control and Prevention of Travel Associated Legionnaires’ Disease [1] These guidelines are designed to ensure a common standard of response to single cases and clusters of travel-associated Legionnaires’ disease across Europe, and were endorsed by the European Commission in 2003. The history and current activities of EWGLI are described further on its website (www.ewgli.org)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call