 And dozens of people treated for knee pain end up with serious and life-threatening infections. Well now, a health clinic in Monmouth County is shuttered. It is a story you're seeing only on News 12, New Jersey. Jim Murdoch first broke this story this afternoon. He's outside Jersey Shore University Medical Center, where many of the victims were taken for emergency surgery. Jim, tell us more. A health alert was just issued by the state of New Jersey, and this is why dozens of people were infected after receiving injections down at that wall-township facility, the Osio Relief Institute. Now, many of those victims came right here to Jersey Shore University Medical Center for Emergency Surgery. The State Department of Health and Local Agencies investigated the clinic and found multiple infection control and injection safety breaches that have previously been associated with infections and outbreaks. Now, the clinic stopped giving injections to treat Osio arthritis on March 6th of this year, and we are told it closed a day later. Cultures from the infections found strep and staph forms of bacteria, along with several others. At least 20 patients had surgery following the injections. Symptoms began appearing within 24 hours. Most of the injections were performed in early March, but the investigation revealed a case as far back as last October. Earlier, we spoke with an attorney for one of the patients, a 64-year-old man, who says his condition rapidly deteriorated only hours after receiving that injection. Watch. Walter had the injections, felt fine, went home, and in fact, he went to work early the next day for the state of New Jersey for DOT, became very ill, high temperature. His wife, who was a nurse at Jersey Shore, recognized the signs and symptoms of infection, took him to the hospital, and Jersey Shore did an excellent job of trying to help him. The New Jersey Department of Health is looking for additional cases of any septic joint following injections from September 1, 2016 through March 6 of this year. Now, doctors tell me, if you had injections during that time at the Osteo Relief Institute in Wall Township and you're experiencing symptoms like joint stress and high fever and pain and swelling, you need to go in an emergency room right away and be seen. We're live in Neptune. Jim Murdoch, News 12, New Jersey.