This page houses a selection of news-related MAHC items, such as magazine articles and blog posts, organized by date. To suggest the inclusion of additional news items not listed on this page, please contact MAHC@cdc.gov.
2016
Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) Features
Title:Updated Model Aquatic Health Code Now Available (August 2016) Summary: The second edition of the MAHC, which includes important updates to the first edition that was released in 2014, is now available from the CDC.
Water Quality Products
Title:Keeping Cool in the Pool (July 2016) Summary: With the release of 2016 MAHC, CDC is taking steps to ensure the public is safe in swimming pools and other water venues.
Water Conditioning & Purification Magazine
Title:Second MAHC Edition Released (July 2016) Summary: The Council for the Model Aquatic Health Code (CMAHC) announced that CDC released the 2016 MAHC on July 15. This second edition includes important updates to the first edition, which was released in 2014.
Aqua Magazine
Title:MAHC Second Edition Released (July 2016) Summary: The Council for the Model Aquatic Health Code (CMAHC) has announced that CDC has released an updated second edition of the MAHC — the 2016 MAHC. The initial version was published in 2014.
Athletic Business
Title:CMAHC Announces Release of the Second MAHC Edition (July 2016) Summary: The Council for the Model Aquatic Health Code (CMAHC) announced today that CDC released the 2016 MAHC on July 15, 2016. This second edition of the MAHC includes important updates to the first edition released in 2014.
Title: CDC Issues New Model Aquatic Health Code (August 2016) Summary: The second edition of the Model Aquatic Health Code has been released and includes a variety of changes, from minor to substantial.
Title:Secondary Sanitation Required in Delaware (January 2016) Summary: Among several changes to its commercial-pool code, Delaware will require a form of secondary sanitation in certain pools as of Jan. 2, 2016. The updated pool and spa code will require such systems on wading pools, treatment pools, spray pads and vessels designated to serve the differently abled. The requirements apply to new construction and renovations.
2015
Water Quality Products
Title:CMAHC welcomes eight new sponsors (September 29, 2015) Summary: Organizations made donations to sustain the Model Aquatic Health Code.
Athletic Business
Title:CMAHC Welcomes Eight New Sponsors (September 24, 2015) Summary: Leading organizations make substantial donations to sustain the Model Aquatic Health Code, striving for a higher aquatic health and safety standard.
Aquatics International Magazine
Title: Update on MAHC Meeting (September 30, 2015) Summary: As the Model Aquatic Health Code undergoes its first revision, the committee charged with shepherding its development has made some changes to the development process and announced logistics for streaming of its October meeting.
Title:Group to Meet for MAHC Update (September 2, 2015) Summary: The Council for the Model Aquatic Health Code will take a vote among its members to determine which of the more than 150 proposed changes to adopt in the second edition. Before that, the group, which aids the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention by shepherding the continual improvement of the first federal aquatics standard, will meet in October to discuss the revision requests.
Pool and Spa News
Title:Model Aquatic Health Code to Undergo First Revision (September 1, 2015) Summary: After receiving more than 150 requests for revisions, the Council for the Model Aquatic Health Code will take a vote among its members to help determine which changes will be implemented.
Science, Technology, and General Interest News (STGIST)
Title:CDC report outbreaks caused by diarrhea parasite in public pools, hot tubs (June 29, 2015) Summary: People who swim are happier and healthier, but many public pools in the country may be dangerous. A parasite called Cryptosporidium, which is linked to diarrhea, killed a person and hospitalized more than 1,700 people in 32 states for the years 2011 to 2012.
Latinos Health
Title:Parasites immune to water treatment may still be lurking in pools (June 29, 2015) Summary: Summer season has officially started and with this, pools and even hot tubs owners are starting to open their doors to the public. However, before you jump into the inviting water, a new report states that parasites are now immune to water treatment methods and can be the main cause for the wide-spread of swimming pool contamination incidents in the country.
Medical Daily
Title:More treated pools and hot tubs are contaminated with parasites, and infecting people (June 27, 2015) Summary: Pools and hot tubs have always been known to be epicenters of infection. Despite the many attempts to kill bacteria and other assorted germs with chemicals like chlorine, certain unsanitary practices (like peeing in the pool, for instance) may undermine treatment methods and spread disease. But does that mean we should refrain from swimming altogether?
Barfblog
Title:Almost 1800 sickened: It's summer (up north), but beware the water (June 26, 2015) Summary: Outbreaks of illness associated with recreational water use result from exposure to chemicals or infectious pathogens in recreational water venues that are treated (e.g., pools and hot tubs or spas) or untreated (e.g., lakes and oceans).
CBS News
Title:Swimming pool, hot tub water contamination increasing in the US (June 25, 2015) Summary: Outbreaks of illness in pools, hot tubs and lakes throughout the United States have been increasing in recent years as a result of a parasite called Cryptosporidium.
Title: CMAHC Announces Voting Is Open on MAHC Changes (December 20, 2015) Summary: The Council for the Model Aquatic Health Code (CMAHC) announced that voting on the 159 Model Aquatic Health Code (MAHC) Change Requests (CRs) is open for members through Dec. 20, 2015.
Title:NACCHO Recommends Best Practices for Recreational Water Venues (March 2015) Summary: NACCHO, in a policy statement on recreational water safety, asserts that when public health resources are used to support water safety, preventable illness and injury can be decreased.
The National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO)
Title:Healthy and Safe Swimming Week Provides Local Health Departments with Tools to Kick off Summer (May 19, 2015) Summary: Local health departments are charged with keeping their communities protected through public swimming venue inspections, and a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) awareness initiative provides them with the tools and resources to do so effectively.
NACCHO, the national organization representing local public health departments across the United States, released a new policy statement calling for a renewed focus on improving recreational water safety. The statement emphasizes the importance of pool inspection and other recreational water safety activities and specifically mentions the Model Aquatic Health Code as a tool health departments can use to decrease waterborne injury and illness while promoting healthy swimming.
Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) Features
Title: A Decade after CSTE’s Call to Action, a New Voluntary Model Health Code Launches (October 2014) Summary: What began with strong surveillance and epidemiologic data supporting a CSTE position statement has spurred a national, multidisciplinary model pool code development process, a multi-thousand-person public dialogue, and the creation of a new non-profit organization to ensure the model code remains up to date. By Douglas Sackett, executive director of the Council for the Model Aquatic Health Code.
CDC's Your Health – Your Environment Blog
Title:A Model Aquatic Health Code for Healthy Pools (September 2014) Summary: At the request of local and state health departments, and the aquatics industry, CDC led a national effort to develop the Model Aquatic Health Code (MAHC).
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR)
Title:CDC’s Model Aquatic Health Code, First Edition (September 2014) Summary: The first edition of the Model Aquatic Health Code was released on August 29, 2014, and is now available from CDC.
Title:Model Aquatic Health Code Update (July/August 2014) Summary: Author Dale McFarland, General Manager of the KeyLime Cove Water Resort, discusses the upcoming MAHC First Edition due for release this summer. Note: Click "skip" on the next page; there is no need to sign in.
Aquatics International Magazine
Title:How ‘Bout that MAHC (October 2014) Summary: The MAHC will help us all to kick it up a notch at our aquatic facilities, whether they are brand new, or old and out of date. Most of all, it will assist those states and municipalities that have been without adequate and up to date pool codes.
Title:MAHC Released (October 2014) See page 11 of the online publication for more information. Summary: After seven years in the making, the first edition of the Model Aquatic Health Code has been released.
Title:The MAHC is Now Available (September 2014) Summary: Nearly 10 years in the making, the first federal Model Aquatic Heath Code has been officially released.
Title: As MAHC Moves Forward, A Look Back (May 2014) Summary: After nearly 10 years, the first comprehensive version of the Model Aquatic Health Code is almost complete.
Title:Blind Spot (March 2014) Summary: Article discussing why HMAC aquatics facilities are giving the industry a bad name and what can be done to change it.
Title:Federal Model Code Hits Final Stretch (March 2014) Summary: Article discussing the remaining steps in development and release of the full MAHC in 2014.
Title:Public Comments Being Taken for MAHC (March 2014) Summary: The Model Aquatic Health Code, the federally created health and safety code covering all areas of public pools and aquatics facilities, from water chemistry to lifeguard training, is up for public comment for the last time.
Title:Progress on the Model Aquatic Health Code (March 2014) Summary: Article previewing the release of the first full draft of the MAHC and its effects on aquatic facility operators.
2013
Journal of Environmental Health
Title:Healthy and Safe Swimming: Pool Chemical–Associated Health Events [PDF - 3 pages] (May 2013) Summary: Column discussing prevention of health events associated with pool chemicals. The article includes examples of pool chemical posters as well as information on how the MAHC can be a beneficial tool in preventing accidents involved with pool chemicals.
Pool and Spa News
Title:Clearing Up Something About the MAHC (May 2013) Summary: A blog post discussing the concept of a “model code” and what it means for those considering adopting it.
Title:Bringing Science to the Poolside - NPHIC News, page 10 (September-October 2012) Summary: An article introducing the Model Aquatic Health Code and describing its goals, development process, and what it can achieve.
Title: Wading Through the Rules (July 2012) Summary: A summary of the four initiatives currently shaping the aquatics sector including the 1) Model Aquatic Health Code (MAHC), 2) Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Compliance, 3) Energy-Efficient Codes, 4) The Virginia Graeme Baker Pool & Spa Safety Act (VGB).
Aquatics International Magazine
Title:Will MAHC Kill Competitive Swimming? (October 2012) Summary: Concern has arisen over a provision in one section of the Model Aquatic Health Code that’s now up for public comment.
Title:Key MAHC Modules Up for Review (October 2012) Summary: Individuals from across the industry have been working with experts at the Centers for Disease Control to develop a Model Aquatic Health Code.
Title:Agencies Sign Code Agreement (July 2012) Summary: The National Environmental Health Association, the International Code Council, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to enhance collaboration and recognize the co-existence of the International Swimming Pool & Spa Code and the Model Aquatic Health Code.
Title:Tools of the Trade (June 2012) Summary: Operators are the heart of any aquatics facility.
Title:Access for All (June 2012) Summary: With the recent spate of government regulations and codes — VGB, ADA, MAHC, ISPSC — the aquatics industry has just about had it with the feds.
Title: MAHC Proposes CYA Restriction (May 2012) Summary: The recommendation in the latest working draft of the MAHC to recommend cyanuric acid (CYA) only in outdoor pools has caused concern among some in the aquatics industry.
Title: Federal Mandates (May 2012) Summary: A look at 2012 laws, regulations and guidelines. What you need to know to operate an aquatics facility this season.
Title:Safety Factors (March 2012) Summary: In April 2009, a committee was formed to develop the Risk Management/Safety Module for the CDC’s Model Aquatic Health Code.
Title:Built on Evidence (January 2012) Summary: The goal of the Model Aquatic Health Code is to codify scientifically proven data in the aquatics industry.
Title: Chuck Neuman (January 2012) Summary: From the time he started his first business, a pool construction company, in 1973, Chuck Neuman has never been afraid to dig into a new project.
Title:2011 Industry News (January 2012) Summary: Embattled red cross launches a new guard program.
International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials
Title:ICC, CDC and NEHA Unite to Enhance Public Safety (May 2012) Summary: Representatives from the International Code Council, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the National Environmental Health Association have entered into a historic Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to enhance the safety of aquatic facilities.
Title: California Operator Certification Bill Advances (May 2012) Summary: Discusses California Assembly Bill 1726 [PDF - 6 pages], which has used the MAHC Operator Training module to craft a bill to require qualified operators with operator training at public pools in California. The Bill was moved out of the Health Committee and has still to be voted on in the House and Senate.
Title:MAHC Moving Forward (November 2011) Summary: Those charged with developing the Model Aquatic Health Code anticipate that all but three modules are likely to be ready for public comment by the end of the year.
Title:MAHC Module Up for Public Comment (June 2011) Summary: Individuals from across the industry have been working with experts at the Centers for Disease Control to develop a Model Aquatic Health Code.
Title:Nothing But Air (June 2011) Summary: Have you ever calculated how much urine and sweat are in the average pool? The number might surprise you
Title:Training Required (March 2011) Summary: Are you a certified operator? Does your facility have one on staff? If not, you may be running afoul of the first set of MAHC guidelines.
Title:Up to Code (March 2011) Summary: Have you ever worked at a public pool and felt a degree of panic not knowing if your pool was in compliance with the requirements of public health code?
Title:Viewpoint: Training Required (March 2011) Summary: Are you a certified operator? Does your facility have one on staff? If not, you may be running afoul of the first set of MAHC guidelines. Note: The current version of the MAHC Operator Training Module does not include a specified length of time required for an operator training course.
Title:Keepers of the Code (February 2011) Summary: The Model Aquatic Health Code is coming.
Title:2011 POWER 25: Keepers of the Code (February 2011) Summary: Get to know the professionals leading the creation of CDC’s Model Aquatic Health Code (MAHC).
Title:Capt. Charles Otto III (February 2011) Summary: He hasn’t found a cure for cancer or put an end to the common cold, but the United States is a healthier nation thanks to Capt. Charles Otto III, U.S. Public Health Service.
Title:Power 25: Doug Sackett (February 2011) Summary: Doug Sackett has worked in aquatics since he came to the New York State Health Department more than 30 years ago, and in that time he’s been responsible for a lot. But not even an investigation of a major 2005 crypto outbreak that has resulted in the industry’s first class action lawsuit compares with his work overseeing the Model Aquatic Health Code.
Title:Michael Beach, Ph.D. (February 2011) Summary: Anyone in aquatics who doesn’t already know the name Dr. Michael Beach soon will. As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s associate director for healthy water, Beach is one of the nation’s foremost experts on recreational water illnesses.
Title:Joe Hunsaker (February 2011) Summary: Joe Hunsaker has spent a lifetime making his mark in aquatics, first as a national level competitive swimmer, and later as a founder of one of the nation’s leading aquatic design firms, Counsilman-Hunsaker.
Title:Frank Guido (February 2011) Summary: As assistant Commissioner at the Westchester County (N.Y.) Bureau of Public Health Protection, Frank Guido was responsible for 600 public pools and more than 40 public bathing beaches.
Title:Colleen Maitoza (February 2011) Summary: You won’t find many environmental health professionals as dedicated to aquatics as Colleen Maitoza.
Title:Franceen Gonzales (February 2011) Summary: Franceen Gonzales was proud when Great Wolf Lodge opened in Mason, Ohio, in 2006. She was the corporate director of aquatics at Madison, Wis.-based Great Wolf Resorts, overseeing operations and maintenance of the company’s nine waterparks.
Title:Lee Tate (February 2011) Summary: Lee Tate may have retired from his job as an environmental engineer for the state of Georgia, but he’s not relaxing in a rocking chair or hitting the golf course just yet.
Title:Sung Choe (February 2011) Summary: Until Sung Choe became part of the recreational water program at NSF International in 2004, he had very little to do with aquatics.
Title:Bob Vincent (February 2011) Summary: There are approximately 38,000 public pools in Florida, and Bob Vincent is one man overseeing them all.
Title:Hero with a Thousand Faces (February 2011) Summary: Our Power 25 issue is full of examples of people who are giving of themselves in a benevolent fashion. They are the men and women who have taken on the mighty task of crafting the Model Aquatic Health Code.
Title:John Linn (February 2011) Summary: Just as Walt Disney was the man behind the mouse, you might say John Linn is the man behind the whale.
Walt Disney World Public Affairs Press Release
Title: Disney Experts Help Establish National Pool Safety Code (March 2011) Summary: Two Disney employees, Amy Duck and Michael Beatty, have joined the MAHC effort to offer their expertise and insight.
Title: The Model Aquatic Health Code: Cracking the Code (November 2010) Summary: Seven exclusive and free sessions focused on explaining the Model Aquatic Health Code (MAHC).
Title:The Model Aquatic Health Code: Cracking the Code (October 2010) Summary: A massive new aquatic code with the potential to revolutionize the industry is in the works. Here’s a sneak peek at the code — and how to prepare for what’s coming.
Title:VGB x 1,000? (October 2010) Summary: For the aquatics industry, the Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act confirmed the worst fears about government regulation: It was carelessly crafted, poorly communicated, arbitrarily enforced and blindly implemented.
Title:Clarifying the Code (October 2010) Summary: In the United States, there is no federal regulatory authority for disinfected recreational venues; all pool codes are developed, reviewed and approved by state and/or local public health officials.
Title:Coded Language (October 2010) Summary: In the development of the Model Aquatic Health Code, one of the more challenging technical committees has been the group tackling lifeguarding/bather supervision.
Title: Cracking the Code (October 2010) Summary: When officials in Charleston, S.C., heard that their state’s Department of Health and Environmental Control was going to start enforcing its lifeguard standard this year, they immediately closed half of the Martin Luther King Jr. Pool.
National Association of Local Boards of Health (NALBOH) Newsletter