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images from interactive map courtesy Hawaiʻi Department of Health Clean Water Branch

High Bacteria Count Advisory Issued For Miloliʻi

by Big Island Video News
on Dec 3, 2020 at 4:01 pm

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STORY SUMMARY

SOUTH KONA, Hawaiʻi - The public is advised of a water quality exceedance of enterococci at Miloliʻi, after levels of 344 per 100 mL were detected during routine beach monitoring.

(BIVN) – The State of Hawaiʻi is letting the public know that a water quality exceedance of enterococci has been detected at Miloliʻi in South Kona.

The Health Department released this statement, which contains mostly standard language for High Bacteria Count Advisories:

The public is advised of a water quality exceedance of enterococci at Milolii, Hawai‘i. Levels of 344 per 100 mL have been detected during routine beach monitoring. The Department of Health Clean Water Branch provides beach monitoring and notification through its beach program. The advisory for this beach is posted because testing for enterococci indicate that potentially harmful microorganisms such as bacteria, viruses, protozoa, or parasites may be present in the water. Swimming at beaches with pollution in the water may make you ill.

Children, the elderly, and people with weakened immune systems are the most likely populations to develop illnesses or infections after coming into contact with polluted water, usually while swimming. Fortunately, while swimming-related illnesses can be unpleasant, they are usually not very serious – they usually require little or no treatment or get better quickly upon treatment, and they usually have no long-term health effects.

The most common illness associated with swimming in water polluted by fecal pathogens is gastroenteritis. It occurs in a variety of forms that can have one or more of the following symptoms: nausea, vomiting, stomachache, diarrhea, headache or fever. Other minor illnesses associated with swimming include ear, eye, nose and throat infections. In highly polluted water, swimmers may occasionally be exposed to more serious diseases.

Not all illnesses from a day at the beach are from swimming. Food poisoning from improperly refrigerated picnic lunches may also have some of the same symptoms as swimming-related illnesses, including stomachache, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. At any given time and place, we are constantly exposed to a variety of microorganisms that have the potential of making us ill.

The beach has been posted and this advisory will remain in effect until water sample results no longer exceed the threshold level of 130 enterococci per 100 mL.


Filed Under: Kailua-Kona Tagged With: Milolii

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