Legionnaires' disease symptoms included exhaustion, upset stomachs, fevers, dehydration
SAN JOSE, Calif. -- The bacteria that causes Legionnaires' disease has been found at a hotel spa in San Jose, California.
Santa Clara County health officials confirmed they've tested a pool and hot tub at Aloft San Jose Cupertino after a couple staying at the hotel contracted Legionnaires'.
The spa is currently closed and is being decontaminated.
Long Beach residents Dan and Rita Miles visited San Jose on June 25 and 26. The trip was meant to be a sweet send-off for their youngest daughter and her family who are moving out of state.
"We actually looked and said, 'Since it's going to be warm, why don't we stay at the hotel nearby your house, and we use the pool and the jacuzzi and things like that,'" Dan told ABC San Francisco affiliate KGO.
Days later, the couple's call to 911 landed both in a Long Beach hospital, diagnosed with Legionnaires' disease.
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"At one in the morning, on Saturday morning, I could hear Dan get up to use the restroom. As he's walking past our bed, I can hear he has difficulty breathing. And I realized, 'Oh, my goodness, if I don't call 911, there's only two of us here,'" Rita recalled. "He's not capable of calling 911. We need help."
They'd been experiencing exhaustion, upset stomachs, fevers and more in the days prior. These are symptoms the couple initially thought could be linked to food poisoning.
"I resisted going to the ER room, thinking that 'hey, I'm just really tired. This will pass,'" Dan said. "And, quite frankly, I really don't remember from Wednesday on."
Rita said they were both severely dehydrated. Dan had acute kidney damage, later reversed.
"My urine was red when I got to the emergency room," Rita described. "And the doctor just looked at it and said, 'You are severely dehydrated.'"
Rita, a nurse, was hospitalized for five days. Dan spent nine days in the hospital, with four on a ventilator.
According to the couple, an X-ray revealed Dan's lungs were completely white.
"People kept saying, 'I know he's testing negative for COVID. It's gotta be COVID. These are COVID lungs. These are COVID lungs,'" Rita remembered. "And in fact, it's not. It's bacteria from the Legionellosis. And it's bacteria that just grows in your lungs."
The couple said their three daughters immediately thought back to the late-June visit and reached out to Santa Clara County Public Health officials and Aloft San Jose Cupertino.
The county has since tested the hotel's pool and hot tub.
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A joint response from the County of Santa Clara Department of Environmental Health (DEH) and the County of Santa Clara Public Health Department (PHD) read:
"After receiving a complaint regarding a possible exposure to Legionella at the Aloft San Jose Cupertino pool and spa areas, DEH immediately launched an investigation. DEH inspected the pool and spa areas, which are the areas permitted by DEH. An environmental health specialist collected samples from the hotel's pool, spa, filling spigots, and recirculation equipment as recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidance in consultation with the California Department of Public Health.
Of the samples collected at the hotel a sample collected from the spa filter confirmed the presence of Legionella (Legionella pneumophila), which was confirmed in test results. The spa is closed as it undergoes the CDC-recommended specific decontamination process. The hotel will notify DEH when the decontamination process is completed, and the spa will be resampled to verify there is no presence of Legionella before the spa is authorized to reopen. No additional cases connected to the hotel have been reported to the County of Santa Clara Public Health Department."
SCCPHD confirmed there have been nine cases of Legionellosis reported in Santa Clara County in 2022, as of Aug. 9.
Cases are reported based on county of residence of the individuals, so the Miles are not counted in the nine reported cases in Santa Clara County.
An official inspection shared with KGO uncovered no detectable levels of chlorine was found in the water samples collected at Aloft San Jose Cupertino.
Such disinfectants are needed to reduce the risk of spreading germs like Legionella.
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Part of the official inspection shared with KGO, noted, "No additional chlorine or muriatic containers were available onsite to manually service the spa."
The document named a desk facilities/pool service staff member said, "They ran out of chemicals and had asked the pool service company to bring additional, due to short supply, the chemicals were due to arrive 7/5/22."
In response, Rita shared, "Please don't let that be the reason that you are not testing. Because (you're) not putting chlorine in it doesn't mean the pool doesn't have to be tested. You have to have records you have to maintain. These are people's lives that we're dealing with."
Moving forward, she plans to pack chlorine testing strips in her suitcase -- a level of safety she hopes hotel officials take seriously during future stays.
Meanwhile, recovery continues for Dan. He's lost 45 pounds since being diagnosed.
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"I start doing physical exercise around the house and things like that," he described. "And I'm good till about one-two o'clock in the afternoon. But each day, I push myself a little further."
The two credit the work their daughters did to reach both Long Beach and Santa Clara County health officials, and the hotel.
"We raised three wonderful daughters," Dan shared.
KGO reached out to Aloft San Jose Cupertino and Marriott for comment, but have not yet heard back.