Quincy veterans home resident tests positive for Legionnaires’ disease
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[December 29, 2020]
By SARAH MANSUR
Capitol News Illinois
smansur@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD — A resident at the state-run
veterans home in Quincy has tested positive for both COVID-19 and
Legionnaires’ disease, according to a news release from the Illinois
Department of Veterans Affairs.
The Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs and the Illinois Department
of Public Health announced on Wednesday the agencies are investigating
the case of Legionnaires’ disease in a single resident, who tested
positive for COVID-19 on Nov. 30 and showed pneumonia symptoms on Dec.
16, according to the news release.
The Illinois Veterans Home at Quincy was notified on Dec. 22 of the
resident’s positive test for Legionnaires’ disease, which is a severe
pneumonia caused by the inhalation of waterborne bacteria.
No other residents have tested positive for Legionnaires’ disease,
according to an IDVA spokesperson.
The positive resident lives in Hammond Hall, which had not previously
reported the presence of Legionella, the type of bacteria that causes
Legionnaires’ disease. Hammond Hall is one of six residential halls at
the Quincy facility in Adams County.
After the positive Legionnaire’s test was reported on Dec. 22, Quincy
facility staff and officials with the Adams County Health Department
spoke by phone with representatives from the Illinois Department of
Public Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs and Dr. Avery Hart, who is a medical
consultant for the IDVA homes on behalf of IDPH, according to the news
release.
“On the call, the CDC asked for clean-out and flushing logs which are
part of the water management plan for the facility. All actions by the
Illinois Veterans’ Home in Quincy are consistent with the water
management plan following CDC protocols,” according to the IDVA news
release. “IDPH infectious disease staff are working with the facility to
collect information and further investigate the resident’s illness.”
On Monday, an IDVA spokesperson said the resident who tested positive
for Legionnaires’ disease and COVID-19 is responding well to treatment.
The last legionella test at Hammond Hall was conducted Oct. 27 and was
negative, according to the IDVA release.
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A resident at the state-run Illinois Veterans Home in
Quincy has tested positive for both COVID-19 and Legionnaires’
disease, the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs has reported.
The resident lives in Hammond Hall. (Credit: quincyivh.org)
The last case of Legionnaires’ disease was reported at the Quincy
facility on Dec. 21, 2019, in Fifer Hall, according to the release.
An outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease between 2015 and 2018 killed 13
residents at Quincy.
The single incident of Legionnaires’ disease at the Quincy home
comes as the facility also faces an outbreak of COVID-19.
As of Dec. 26, the Quincy facility has reported five resident
deaths related to COVID-19, 123 total positive cases among residents
and 143 total positive cases among employees since the pandemic
began.
The state-run veterans homes at Manteno and LaSalle have also
reported COVID-19 outbreaks, prompting Gov. JB Pritzker last month
to send members of the Illinois National Guard to assist staff with
administrative tasks at all three veterans homes experiencing
outbreaks.
As of Dec. 26, the Manteno facility has reported a total of 19
resident coronavirus-related deaths. Since the outbreak began,
Manteno has reported 69 positive cases among residents and 69
positive cases among employees.
As of Dec. 27, the LaSalle facility has reported 34 resident deaths
related to COVID-19 since Nov. 1. Since the start of the pandemic,
108 residents at LaSalle have tested positive and 105 employees have
tested positive.
Three legislative committees are investigating the administration’s
response to the LaSalle outbreak, and the Illinois Department of
Human Services’ acting inspector general has also announced an
investigation into the deaths at LaSalle.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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