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At least 15 people in Jackson, Missouri have been infected with E. coli bacteria after drinking water at a local fitness center. E. coli
is a strain of the bacteria that causes infections in an estimated
70,000 Americans each year, according to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC). Public Health officials from Cape
Girardeau County tested a drinking fountain and a faucet at the Class
Act Family Fitness Center and confirmed the presence of E. coli in both samples. The fitness center is served by a private well that was shut off immediately following the outbreak. While
officials at the Missouri Department of Health and Human Services are
trying to determine the source of the contamination, the owner of the
fitness center believes the private well was contaminated with bacteria
during rainstorms in April. In an effort to address the problem, the
owner has taken several steps to protect his customers, such as removing
the drinking fountain, providing bottled water, adding chlorine to the
well and installing a chlorinator for future protection. The facility will not provide drinking water until it is deemed safe by health officials. This example illustrates the importance of carefully monitoring water quality and properly disinfecting water supplies. Chlorine disinfectants help protect public health by maintaining a residual in the water which destroys disease-causing bacteria, viruses and parasites in drinking water.
The vast majority of U.S. water systems that disinfect their water use
some type of chlorine-based process, either alone or in combination
with other disinfectants.
For more information about the safety benefits of chlorinated water, please visit our website.
(Chris Wiant, M.P.H., Ph.D., is president
and CEO of the Caring for Colorado Foundation. He is also chair of the Water
Quality & Health Council.)
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