Man Dies from Rare Soil-Borne Disease in North QLD – Health Authorities Issue Floodwater Warning
A Townsville man is the 31st to die of melioidosis in Queensland this year as infections spike after heavy rain. Here’s what you need to know about the rare but deadly soil-borne bacteria.

The Deadly Dirt: North QLD Grapples with a Bacterial Bad Guy Called Melioidosis
By the numbers:
- 221 cases reported in QLD this year
- 31 deaths — latest in Townsville
- Cases spike during floods & heavy rainfall
- Incubation: typically 1–21 days, but can lie low for years
What’s Melioidosis, and Why Should You Care?
Melioidosis is the tropical cousin of “I stepped in something I probably shouldn’t have.” It’s caused by the bacteria Burkholderia pseudomallei, which lives in the soil and water up north. And after all that La Niña-style rain, it’s partying in puddles like it’s Wet’n’Wild.
Here’s how it hits:
Melioidosis Facts | Details |
---|---|
Bacteria | Burkholderia pseudomallei |
Transmission | Via cuts, inhalation, or ingestion of contaminated water or soil |
Symptoms | Cough, fever, pneumonia, sepsis, skin ulcers, and organ failure |
Incubation period | 1–21 days (but can lurk for years) |
Treatment | 3+ months of heavy-duty antibiotics (IV + oral) |
Risk from pets | Possible via bodily fluids, but extremely low |
Who’s most at risk? | Heavy drinkers, diabetics, cancer patients, those with lung/kidney disease |
Low risk for | Healthy adults and kids |
This Ain’t Just a Flu
The problem? It’s called the “great imitator” because it tricks doctors into thinking it’s something mundane. By the time you figure it out, it could already be knocking on your kidneys.
As Queensland Health warns: “It can be fatal if not treated with the right antibiotics.”
If you’ve recently played hopscotch in floodwaters and feel crook — don’t wait. Get checked, fast.
Stay Clean, Stay Safe: Health Tips
QLD Health has issued these golden rules:
- Slap waterproof dressings on any cuts or grazes
- Don’t go barefoot in muddy or flood-hit areas
- Avoid huffing dust in the dry season
- Keep your pets away from suspect puddles
- If you’re high-risk (diabetic, etc.), take extra care
There’s still no vaccine for melioidosis, so your best bet is good old-fashioned prevention. Or, as Aussies put it: if it looks like a swamp and smells like a swamp, maybe don’t wade through it in thongs.
Final Thought: A Flood, a Bug, and No Time for Slackin’
If you thought Queensland’s biggest natural threat was the crocs — surprise! It might just be the soggy soil under your feet. As public health officials scramble to manage this spike, locals are urged to treat floodwater like it’s brewed in a back-alley lab.
And for the love of Vegemite — patch up those scratches before you take your dog for a stroll in ankle-deep muck.