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San Diego ordered to act against hepatitis A outbreak

Information from the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency has been handed out to homeless residents in parks, informing them of hepatitis A symptoms and prevention.
(Nelvin C. Cepeda / San Diego Union-Tribune)
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After weeks of delay, hand-washing stations were to start popping up in San Diego on Friday — one day after the county health department sent a letter demanding the city improve sanitary conditions in areas where homeless people affected by an ongoing hepatitis A outbreak are known to congregate.

Tom Christensen, a spokesman with the county Health and Human Services Agency, said the first station was being installed in front of the Neil Good Day Center in downtown San Diego, and several more would be placed in Balboa Park.

The county outlined a sanitation plan that requires city workers to “take immediate action to address the unsanitary living conditions of the at-risk population,” according to the letter from Helen Robbins-Meyer, the county’s chief administrator, to Scott Chadwick, the city’s chief operating officer.

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Actions that the city must take within five days include expanding access to public restrooms and wash stations, increasing the number of hand-washing stations and pressure washing of public right of ways on a weekly basis — including sidewalks, streets and gutters — to remove “all feces, blood, bodily fluids or contaminated surfaces.”

Underway since November 2016, the outbreak has killed 15 people, most of them homeless residents or illicit drug users, with 379 confirmed hepatitis A cases and more than 200 hospitalizations.

After months of slow progress in getting permits for hand-washing stations, as reported this week by Voice of San Diego, the county got more specific in its letter to the city. A total of 30 locations are specified for areas where homeless residents are known to gather.

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Sisson writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

paul.sisson@sduniontribune.com

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