© St. Petersburg Times, published October 7, 2001
LANTANA -- Relatives of a Florida man who contracted a fatal case of anthrax are being given antibiotics as a precaution and his co-workers have been tested and cleared, health authorities said Saturday.
The search to find out how Bob Stevens, 63, contracted the rare and lethal inhaled form of the disease expanded one day after his death.
More than 50 health and law enforcement officials have fanned out across Palm Beach County to track his movements over the past two months and look for other cases. Officials are also going over medical records in four North Carolina counties that he might have visited recently.
"We don't have any really hot leads at this time," said Florida epidemiologist Steven Wiersma.
Investigators are awaiting test results from soil and other specimens. The results could take days.
No other cases of anthrax have been reported in the area. Wiersma said several of Stevens' co-workers at the supermarket tabloid the Sun have been tested, but results were negative. Antibiotics are being given to close relatives.
Officials have said there is no evidence that Stevens was the victim of terrorism. Wiersma said tests of Stevens' blood helped confirm that belief because the anthrax in the sample responded to penicillin. Anthrax developed by some countries as a biological weapon could be resistant to the antibiotic, he said.
Officials think Stevens contracted anthrax naturally in Florida. The disease can be contracted from farm animals or soil, though the bacterium is not normally found among wildlife or livestock in the state. Stevens was described as an avid outdoorsman who enjoyed fishing and gardening.
Investigators have cast a wide net in their search in Florida.
County medical examiners are looking over any unexplained deaths, but have not found any cases connected to anthrax. Veterinarians have been told to watch for animals with the disease, but none have turned up.
Investigators also are visiting restaurants, parks and other locations he frequented or even visited casually, Wiersma said.
Health officials are checking intensive care units of area hospitals to check records going back 30 days for suspicious cases. They should be finished Monday, said Tim O'Connor, a county health department spokesman.
The disease has an incubation period of up to 60 days.
Meanwhile, the health department is fielding hundreds of calls from worried or curious citizens. Some want to know what the symptoms are, while others ask where they can get a vaccine to prevent the spread of the disease, O'Connor said. They are told a vaccine is available only to the military, but they are not at risk because the disease is not contagious, he said.