Public Warned to Avoid River Downstream of Homeless Encampments After Feces-Linked Outbreak

The article from⁣ the ⁤Western Journal, written by Samuel⁢ Short, discusses a significant public health issue stemming from the homeless ⁤crisis in California, specifically focusing on a Shigella⁣ outbreak in ⁤Santa Clara County. This ⁤bacterial infection,⁣ which is spread ⁢through direct contact with contaminated feces, ​was reported to have affected a number of homeless individuals living near the Guadalupe River ​downstream from Highway⁤ 85. Health⁣ officials have found that the homeless population is⁢ using⁤ the river for ⁢drinking and bathing, thereby facilitating the spread⁣ of the ‍infection. ​Due ​to the high risk ​of ⁤contagion and potential‍ impacts on the general public, authorities have advised avoiding contact with the water in ‌that ⁤area.

The broader commentary touches on the ongoing homeless crisis in​ California, highlighting its scale and the various ⁣unsuccessful attempts to address it, such as heavy financial investments without effective solutions. The author emphasizes the necessity of innovative approaches to tackle the root causes of homelessness instead of merely managing ‌its symptoms. Moreover, the article reflects on ‌the broader implications of this health crisis, suggesting that it ⁤could be a wake-up call for more decisive action to resolve the homelessness issue in​ California.


Commentary

By Samuel Short June 27, 2024 at 6:26pm

The homeless problem in California is not just one of drug abuse or crime — it is one of public health, as well.

KNTV reported a Shigella outbreak in Santa Clara County, with nine confirmed cases and 21 more suspected cases among the homeless as of Monday.

Health officials in California have advised the public to avoid bathing in or drinking the water from the Guadalupe River downstream from Highway 85, where multiple homeless encampments are located.

According to Mayo Clinic, Shigella infection, or shigellosis, is highly contagious. It’s spread by coming into contact with bacteria from the stool of someone who’s infected.

The bottom line: Homeless people are defecating in the river and spreading illness to other homeless people who use that river for drinking water and bathing.

Now health officials are warning the public to keep their distance to avoid it spreading further.

The San Jose Mercury News quoted Dr. Monika Roy, assistant health officer and communicable disease controller for Santa Clara County, as saying that while Shigella is only fatal in “rare cases,” the public is advised to avoid that part of the Guadalupe River.

Given the highly contagious nature of Shigella, Roy said this should be done “out of an abundance of caution.”

Roy added testing the water for Shigella would be of “limited value,” explaining, “When you have a body of water like a river, there is less data on infection transmission in flowing bodies of water, and there’s certainly not the same mechanisms to remediate that you might have in, say, a backyard pool.”

Are liberal leaders enabling the homeless crisis?

While this development is stomach-churning, it is not unexpected in the saga that is California’s ever-present homeless problem.

Last year, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development reported 181,399 homeless in California, 28 percent of the total homeless population in the country. This is roughly a 40-percent increase from five years earlier.

Homelessness is not just an “unsightly” issue to be cleaned up or swept away.

These are real people. If left unaddressed, the general population of the state could suffer, as the Shigella problem indicates.

The hurdle is how California addresses the issue. While health officials are reportedly at encampments trying to encourage better habits, this treats the symptom.

The state tends to throw money into the void, as $20 billion has been spent over the past five years to deal with it. Just last week, Skid Row residents received news of the opening of the 19-story Weingart Tower, a luxurious housing development for the homeless, where units cost about $600,000 each.

In this case, the homeless will just take tendencies that made them homeless into free housing, where that culture can continue.

Concerning Monday’s Shigella outbreak, maybe its potential to impact the general public will force health officials to be more innovative and actually find a way to solve the problem.


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Sam Short is an Instructor of History with Motlow State Community College in Smyrna, Tennessee. He holds a BA in History from Middle Tennessee State University and an MA in History from University College London.



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