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Activities at U.S. Whitewater Center in North Carolina Suspended After Amoeba Detected

June 28, 2016

The U.S. National Whitewater Center in Charlotte, N.C., announced Friday that it has temporarily suspended its operations after water samples turned up the amoeba believed to have caused the death of an Ohio teenager.

A statement released by the center Friday says the decision was made after talks with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and local health officials. The statement says that while whitewater activities are suspended, the center will remain open for all other operations and activities. A center spokesman didn’t immediately return a call seeking comment.

“We were having discussions about what the next steps should be, and at that point we decided we should talk to the whitewater center,” Mecklenburg County Health Director Marcus Plescia said at a news conference. “When we shared the information we had and some of the concerns we had, they made the decision that that’s what they thought they should do.”

Lauren Seitz of Westerville, Ohio, was visiting North Carolina with her church group. The 18-year-old’s only known underwater exposure was thought to be when her raft overturned at the whitewater center. Seitz died last Sunday.

Plescia said the CDC did testing at the center Wednesday. He said the tests were preliminary and that the actual cultures won’t be available for about a week. He estimated that 11 samples were taken from various parts of the whitewater portion of the center as well as in the internal workings, and that the majority of them turned up the amoeba.

Plescia said it’s not realistic to expect to completely rid the center of the amoeba, but instead to try to ensure that if there are any concentrations, they are very low.

Topics USA North Carolina

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Latest Comments

  • June 29, 2016 at 9:32 am
    Gork says:
    Dear Trump voter: The difference is, this is a commercial enterprise with a facility that immerses customers in water with a very good possibility of ingesting some of that wa... read more
  • June 28, 2016 at 3:26 pm
    mikey says:
    Yes, let's overregulate this when there has been 138 cases in 50 some years in the entire U.S.! We need to regulate every lake and pond as well!
  • June 28, 2016 at 11:24 am
    Gork says:
    In a shining example of conservative hands-off regulation, McCrory has now announced the State will look into health concerns regarding the whitewater operation - after a deat... read more

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