Rate of infection by antibiotic-resistant bacteria steady
The Post and Courier
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Battling the bug
You can protect yourself from MRSA by: --Practicing good hygiene, keeping your hands clean by washing with soap and water or using an alcohol-based hand sanitizer and showering immediately after participating in exercise. --Covering abrasions or cuts with a clean, dry bandage until they heal. --Avoid sharing personal items, such as towels and razors, that come into contact with your bare skin. Use a barrier, clothing or a towel, between your skin and shared equipment, such as weight-training benches. --Maintain a clean environment by establishing cleaning procedures for frequently touched surfaces and surfaces that come into direct contact with people's skin.
The rate of methicillan-resistant staphylococcus, or MRSA, is holding steady in the Lowcountry, area health experts say. While it's difficult to track the number of MRSA infections that occur outside of hospitals, experts say the rate has appeared to plateau, anecdotally at least, after an increase beginning about three years ago. The types of patients developing MRSA, however, is becoming more varied, they said. "It used to be in high school athletes, but it's working its way down to younger students," said Dale Haselden, infectious control practitioner for Trident Health Systems. The nonprofit arm of Trident's parent company, HCA, launched a hand-washing awareness campaign aimed at elementary school students. Floppy-haired "Hannah Montana" star Mitchel Musso is teaching students how to stay clean and MRSA- free. MRSA is a type of staph infection that is resistant to a certain family of antibiotics. The infections begin as a minor cut or sore that does not heal and may worsen rapidly into an abscess. The bacteria is transmitted by skin-to-skin contact or by touching an item that has come into contact with someone's infection. "In general, schools are not a risk for the average student," said Dr. Cassandra Salgado, hospital epidemiologist at the Medical University of South Carolina. Athletic environments — gyms, locker rooms and showers — are a risk setting, she said. Elliot Smalley, executive director of communications for the Charleston County School District, said no cases have been reported so far this school year, although the district usually doesn't report individual cases, he said. Staph infections, including the MRSA strain, are not reportable conditions to public health officials. Only clusters are tracked by the state Department of Health and Environmental Control. Last fall, a few area high school students were treated for MRSA, but the cases were not related and not reported to officials as a cluster. The last reported cluster in the region occurred in 2006. Area physicians are seeing MRSA as an equal opportunity infection. Dr. Radwan Hallaba, co-owner of MedCare Express, said his offices in North Charleston and Mount Pleasant see about two cases each week. "We've been seeing a ton of it since summer 2006," when the Mount Pleasant site opened, Hallaba said. Since then, "It's been a constant, steady stream. I initially saw (MRSA) in kids. Now we see it in infants and adults." Most transmissions he sees are among members of the same household. "Once MRSA colonizes someone, there is the likelihood of colonizing everyone in the household," he said. Dr. Robert Ball, an epidemiologist with DHEC, encourages physicians to culture most skin and soft tissue infections, especially boils, and begin antibiotic therapy as if MRSA was the cause. "Doctors often drain boils without culturing, which this day and time may be incomplete," Ball said.
Reach Jill Coley at 937-5719 or jcoley@postandcourier.com.
|
Posted by letstakeawalk on September 3, 2008 at 1:12 a.m. (Suggest removal)
This should make some people very happy:
http://www.sciam.com/blog/60-second-scie...
http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/abstract.cgi...
Posted by olroofer on September 3, 2008 at 6:23 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Sweet, medical marijuana {{IS}} the answer!
Posted by DanniD on September 3, 2008 at 6:40 a.m. (Suggest removal)
too many people do not wash their hands. Nothing is more disgusting than seeing someone in a public restroom use the bathroom and then leave without washing their hands....ewwwwwwwwwwww.
Posted by RTC on September 3, 2008 at 8:28 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Could it be that the escalated use of antibacterial soap and hand sanitizers is part of the reason for the rise in MRSA? The article claims that it is on the rise in younger children, and what is on their school supply list? Hand sanitizers.
Plain old soap and water used to work just fine. A good many medical facilities are switching to antimicrobial soaps. Antibacterials kill all germs, including the good germs that help a body to build up a defense system.
In our high tech world to destroy all bacteria we seem to be building a new monster.
Posted by DanniD on September 3, 2008 at 9:11 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Illegal aliens did not bring this to the US......improper handwashing, and sub-standard cleaning procedures brought this.
As for the hand sanitizer...I think that stuff is a waste of time. All you are doing is spreading the dirt or whaterver else you have on your hands around when you use that crap. You need to wash with soap and rinse with running water.
Posted by martin on September 3, 2008 at 9:49 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I had one major and several recurrent, much more minor,
MRSA infections last year. This led me to do a lot of internet research.
A lot of work has been done in Europe. There seems to be a connection between the use/overuse of antibiotics in food animals and the development of antibiotic resistant bacteria. Makes sense, doesn't it? We're eating low level of antibiotics all the time because of this.
It also can infect pets, colonise them and spread and re-spread to humans. Unclear if they get it from humans first.
Some doctors want to blame patients for making them prescribe antibiotics when they are not needed.
Beware. Don't think school athletic departments are handling this responsibly. Last year I was told of a private school that took several infected players to play football and didn't tell the opposing team until some of their members were infected. Gladiators and their coaches don't care who they spread it to.
Posted by armymom on September 3, 2008 at 11 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Early, where do our hands not belong?!
You can pick this up from a doorknob or a grocery cart! Or a phone, or a keyboard, or the gas pump, or from books at the library, just pushing open the door at the Circle K.
People who have it that aren't being careful are spreading it without even realizing it.
Posted by blah_blah_blah on September 3, 2008 at 11:27 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I have developed a theory called, "The Mexican Water Theory."
Why is it that when we go to Mexico, we can't drink the water, but the locals can?
It is because we have become germophobes and our bodies are too weak to handle anything new.
All the while, the anti-bacterial stuff, kills a majority of bacteria, the ones that it doesn't only come back stronger.
Posted by suec on September 3, 2008 at 2:58 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I agree with blah_blah. We are a country of germophobes.
Posted by SCgal on September 3, 2008 at 4:51 p.m. (Suggest removal)
It doesn't help when they have the school kids wiping off the lunch tables with a cold soapy towel as a "chore"!
In some states, that is a health dept violation!
As a past PTA in another state we set up Lysol Clean Up and provided Lysol wipes at each cafeteria table!
Each kid was responsible for throwing away their lunch/food, grabbing a Lysol wipe and wiping down their section of the lunch table vs. having a "kid" assigned to do the chore of wiping off a table where kids have coughed, spit, pulled out loose/teeth/blood, picked scabs, noses, etc!!
CCSD disgust me with no such plans!!
PTA also provided cans of Lyson for each teacher and every afternoon after the kids left- water fountains, desk, computer keyboards, bathrooms, handles, light switches were sprayed and left to dry overnight!!!
Posted by STREETLAW on September 3, 2008 at 9:27 p.m. (Suggest removal)
blah, maybe it is because the Mexicans only drink Corona. Its one of the things that needs more research.
And another thing you never hear about is people in Hong Kong getting the Goose Creek flu. Why is that?