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Archive for the ‘mrsa’ Category

MRSA is not the Only Superbug

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

PARIS (AFP) — Scientists said on Sunday they had exposed key workings of a deadly superbug that has become one of the biggest nightmares for hospitals today, opening up paths for new drugs or vaccines to roll back the peril.

Clostridium difficile ranks alongside Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) as a hospital threat, inflicting a rising toll each year as it spreads insidiously through health facilities.

Known as “C-diff,” the bug comprises a bacterium that comes in a spore, or a hardy shell-like jacket. It naturally colonises the gut, but is not a problem for people who are healthy as it is kept in check by other intestinal bacteria.

But when antibiotics are used to treat someone who is sick, the drugs can wipe out the “good” bacteria, which leaves C. difficile to multiply uncontrolled.

As the germ reproduces, it releases toxins that cause severe diarrhoea, sometimes fatally, and colitis that can need surgical removal of the colon.

In a study published in the journal Nature, microbiologists in the United States reported that they had identified which of the two toxins released by C-diff does the big damage.

“For 20 years, we have been focusing on Toxin A. But it turns out the real culprit is Toxin B,” said researcher Dale Gerding of Loyola University in Chicago.

“This is a major finding in how C-diff causes disease in humans,” he said in a press release released by the university.

“It completely flips our whole concept of what the important toxin is with the disease.”

The team devised separate strains of the two toxins and tested them on hamsters.

Separately, scientists at Imperial College London have used X-ray crystallography to produce the first high-resolution images of the germ’s protective jacket.

The work, published in the latest issue of the journal Molecular Microbiology, is important because it opens up a theoretical path for drugs that crack open the shield, disabling the bacterium inside.

C-diff is resistant to many types of antibiotics and can bounce back in a patient who has fallen sick with the germ. In addition, the jacket makes it easily transportable on surfaces and hands.

It causes about half a million cases of sickness, and between 15,000 and 20,000 deaths, in the United States each year, the Loyola University press release said.

SOURCE: AFP

MRSA Study Continues

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

Drug-resistant staph infections are more common in Illinois hospital patients than previously thought, according to new data from the Illinois Hospital Association.

But medical centers may not be to blame: The overwhelming majority of hospital patients with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, were already infected before being admitted, the data suggests.

The findings highlight how prevalent the drug-defying bacteria have become in Illinois communities as well as the importance of measures to stem the spread of infections.

For its latest snapshot, the association relied on expanded diagnostic data reported by hospitals in 2008. Also last year, medical centers screened all intensive care and “at risk” patients for MRSA under a new state law.

During the first nine months of 2008, the association documented 19,428 MRSA cases in hospitals, a 147 percent rise from 7,845 cases during the same period the prior year. The increase was largely due to better reporting by medical centers.

Just 5.3 percent of infected patients contracted MRSA during their hospital stay, according to nine months of 2008 data analyzed by the association. That’s much lower than the 23 percent figure reported nationally by the Association for Professionals in Infection Control in 2007, and the reasons for the disparity remain unclear.

There was also good news Tuesday about the effort to prevent the spread of infections within medical centers, both locally and nationally.

The Illinois Hospital Association found that hospital-acquired MRSA infections declined in each of the first three quarters of 2008. Hospitals’ efforts to screen patients for the bacteria, take precautionary measures with those infected and improve cleaning regimens are likely factors in the decline, said Patricia Merryweather, a senior vice president with the association.

Nationally, researchers from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association that MRSA bloodstream infections in intensive-care patients dropped dramatically from 2001 to 2007.

The infections commonly develop when catheters known as central lines are inserted in major blood vessels, providing an opportunity for bacteria to migrate into the bloodstream.

Efforts under way to address the problem include sterilizing the area where the catheter is to be inserted; stressing hand hygiene; making sure medical personnel wear gowns, gloves and masks, and draping patients to minimize the chance of germs invading the site.

When Johns Hopkins physician Peter Pronovost asked Michigan hospitals to follow a checklist of precautionary measures when inserting central lines in intensive-care-unit patients, all catheter-related bloodstream infections were eliminated within three months, according to a well-known 2006 study.

This week, the Illinois Hospital Association is announcing a new voluntary initiative to bring the Pronovost checklist to intensive-care units in hospitals across the state.

SOURCE: CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Beaches May Harbor Staph Bacteria

Monday, February 16th, 2009

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Swimmers at crowded public beaches are likely to bring home more than a bit of sand in their bathing suits, according to U.S. researchers, who said as many as one in three swimmers may be exposed to contagious staph bacteria.

They said people who swim in subtropical marine waters have a 37 percent higher risk of being exposed to staph bacteria, including an antibiotic resistant staph known as Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA.

“We think that people are the instruments for bringing their organisms into the water and leaving it behind,” Dr. Lisa Plano of the University of Miami told reporters at the American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Chicago on Friday.

“I don’t know if that is the only source. The bacteria may still be in the sand left over from other people, but we haven’t studied that. These are things we plan to do in the future.”

People who have open wounds or are immune compromised have the greatest risk of infection, she said.

In one experiment with more than 1,000 bathers on a popular Florida beach, people spent 15 minutes dunking themselves in the sea, then bringing sea water back with them in a jug.

They then tested the water for staph and MRSA and found 37 percent of the samples contained staph, and 3 percent of those contained MRSA.

“I don’t think you should fear going to the beach,” Plano said, particularly if they take a few simple precautions.

She recommends people shower before going to the beach, to keep from depositing their own germs into the water. And she suggests they shower once they leave, to wash off any pathogens.

“If you don’t go into the water with a gaping wound, you should be fine,” Plano said.

SOURCE: REUTERS.COM

More Northampton County Inmates Sue Prison Over MRSA Infection

Monday, January 26th, 2009

There are now 30 former or current inmates of Northampton County Prison suing the jail and its outside health-care contractor in federal court, claiming they contracted MRSA infections because of deplorable prison conditions and a lack of proper treatment.

Six lawsuits have been filed in U.S. District Court in Allentown within the past month on behalf of Troy Miller, a state prison inmate; Anthony Fernandez and Eric Hockin, current Northampton County inmates; Benjamin Whitmore of Center Valley; Michael Peterson of Allentown and Ronald Holota Jr. of Bethlehem, who claim they contracted the bacterial infection formally known as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus while locked up in the Easton prison.

The suits say the prisoners developed skin boils that had to be drained of pus and the holes that were left behind have permanently scarred them.

Water leaks, dirty showers, filthy blankets and cells and an inadequate flow of fresh air have fostered a breeding ground for the illness as far back as 2005, according to the lawsuits. Inmates not being required to shower contributed to the outbreak and their cells were not properly cleaned because prisoners were given dirty mop water that was passed from one cell to another and never drained, the lawsuits say.

”Mattresses that had been defecated and urinated on were not cleaned or changed between inmates, and instead were quite often left in place for the next inmate’s use,” according to suits filed by attorney Gerald J. Williams in Philadelphia.

Staff at the prison would often taunt and tease those who had been infected by calling them ”MRSA-naries,” the suit says.

The suits name the county and PrimeCare Medical Inc. of Harrisburg, the jail’s health-care service, as defendants. In addition, Corrections Director Todd Buskirk is named as a defendant.

The county’s outside attorneys in the suits — David J. MacMain and Macavan A. Baird of Philadelphia — did not return phone calls seeking comment Friday. Buskirk also could not be reached. Prison officials in 2005 confirmed there had been a MRSA outbreak in the prison.

Williams said both sides of the case are still in the discovery phase — requesting and obtaining information from each other — and no trial date has been scheduled. U.S. District Judge Thomas M. Golden on Jan. 13 ordered all cases in the matter to be joined at least during the discovery phase.

The first of the suits was filed in 2005 by former inmate Gerald R. Schaffer Jr. of Hellertown.

Williams said he expects to file more lawsuits on behalf of prisoners within the next few weeks. He said he believes people are still contracting MRSA at the prison.

”There’s been some improvement, but there are still improvements to be made,” he said.

Two former Bucks County inmates won a $1.2 million jury award in 2005 after claiming they suffered from a MRSA outbreak in jail.

Another suit filed against Bucks County by more than a dozen inmates who claimed to have suffered from MRSA was settled last year. In the settlement, Bucks officials didn’t give monetary awards, but did agree to provide better monitoring and prevention methods for MRSA.

SOURCE: MCALL.COM

MRSA On The Rise Among Children

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

Jan. 20, 2009 — There has been an “alarming rise” in antibiotic-resistant head and neck infections in young children in recent years, researchers from Emory University in Atlanta report.

Specifically, researchers say more and more elementary school-aged children are developing Staphylococcus aureus (”staph,” or S. aureus) infections that do not respond to the antibiotic methicillin. The bacteria responsible for such infections are called MRSA (for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus). MRSA is a common culprit in head and neck infections, and doctors believe it’s responsible for almost every skin infection.

Before the 1980s, most MRSA infections occurred in patients who were hospitalized. But in the past decade, the bacteria have become more common in crowded community environments, such as nursing homes and prisons, and among those with no known risk factors, according to information in the journal article.

“In recent years, there have been increasing reports of community-acquired MRSA infections in children,” the authors write in the journal report.

For the study, Iman Naseri, MD, and colleagues from Emory’s department of otolaryngology reviewed pediatric head and neck infection records from more than 300 hospitals in the U.S. between 2001 and 2006.

Over the six-year period, MRSA head and neck infections in children jumped from 12% of all S. aureus infections in the study in 2001 to 28% in 2006. The average age of the children was about 6 1/2. Most MRSA head and neck infections occurred in the ears (34%), followed by the nose and sinuses (28.3%) and the throat and neck (14.2%).

The findings, published in the January issue of Archives of Otolaryngology — Head & Neck Surgery, have prompted a call for more cautious use of antibiotics. According to the FDA, increasing use of antibiotics plays a large role in the development of antibiotic resistance. The U.S. government calls antibiotic resistance a major public health threat.

“Judicious use of antibiotic agents and increased effectiveness in diagnosis and treatment are warranted to reduce further antimicrobial drug resistance in pediatric head and neck infections,” Naseri’s team writes.

The authors say their results “depict an alarming increase in MRSA in the United States.” They encourage more rapid testing of suspected head and neck infections so that caregivers may prescribe the appropriate antibiotic treatment immediately. Using the wrong antibiotics or using antibiotics to treat a viral infection (such as a cold) can lead to further drug resistance, according to the FDA.

SOURCE: WebMD.Com

MRSA Lurks in Washington Hospitals

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Year after year, the number of victims climbed. But even as casualties mounted - as the germ grew stronger and spread inside hospitals - the toll remained hidden from the public, and hospitals ignored simple steps to control the threat.

Over the past decade, the number of Washington hospital patients infected with a frightening, antibiotic-resistant germ called MRSA has skyrocketed from 141 a year to 4,723.

These numbers don’t appear in public documents. Washington regulators don’t track the germ or its victims, and Washington hospitals do not have to reveal infection rates.

The Seattle Times analyzed millions of computerized hospital records, death certificates and other documents to track the swath of one of the nation’s most widespread, and preventable, epidemics.

In its investigation - the first comprehensive accounting of MRSA cases in Washington hospitals - The Times gained access to state files that revealed 672 previously undisclosed deaths attributable to the infection.

MRSA, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, is spread by touch or contact. It can slip into breaks in the skin as tiny as a mosquito bite.

Six out of seven people infected with MRSA contract it at a health-care facility.

Many people first learned about the germ last fall when the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention set off a media frenzy with its announcement that invasive MRSA infections claim at least 18,000 lives a year, more than AIDS.

But MRSA has been quietly killing for decades. And all along, there has been a simple diagnostic test that could have saved countless lives. This quick and painless test, which costs about $20, lets hospitals know who’s infected or a carrier. Once identified, people with the germ can be isolated from other patients and treated.

Federal veterans hospitals screen all patients for MRSA, which has reduced their cases to near zero. Yet not a single community hospital in Washington screens every patient for the pathogen.

Many hospital officials say widespread screening is unnecessary and too burdensome. They say broad infection-control measures, such as washing hands and wearing protective garments, can thwart MRSA’s spread.

But Washington hospitals violate these fundamental safety measures time and again, state and federal inspection reports reveal, from the Tacoma surgeon who refused to wear a mask during surgery to a Spokane blood technician who carelessly brushed her contaminated hands against supplies destined for other patients.

At Harborview Medical Center in the early 1980s, 17 people died during a MRSA outbreak fueled by the failure of the state’s premier trauma center to isolate all infected patients immediately. But to this day, according to confidential records obtained by The Times, Harborview still rooms some MRSA patients with those who don’t have the germ.

Meanwhile, MRSA is infecting and killing more people this year than ever before.

In October 2005, Joyce Allen went in for open-heart surgery at St. Joseph Medical Center in Tacoma. Doctors told her to expect a quick recovery. But during the operation, MRSA slipped into her chest.

Doctors had cut through her sternum, a flat bone that binds the rib cage and protects the heart. When they fused the sternum back together, the contagion was entombed inside.

The blood-rich bone marrow was a perfect hiding spot. Within a week, the germ pushed into her arteries and crept into vital organs.

Physicians resorted to their most powerful antibiotic - vancomycin - known as the “drug of last resort.” For six weeks, twice a day, Allen received intravenous infusions. A suction system sealed her chest and drained away toxic fluid.

“The pain was excruciating. I wanted to die, it hurt so bad,” Allen says.

Antibiotics failed to conquer the infection. By April 2006, as Allen hovered near death, surgeons made the decision they had dreaded: Cut out the sternum.

They sheared away 6 inches of bone with a diamond-coated blade. Then they severed her abdominal muscles near the groin, and stretched the flaps tight across her chest, to shield her heart.

Allen, 57, is crippled for life. She measures each day by the level of pain. On her worst days, she’s unable to pick up her small grandson.

“This germ destroyed my life,” she says.

Disabled, she gave up her customer-service job at a Tacoma cabinet company. She now lives in a trailer in Spanaway, surviving on $877 a month in government benefits.

Nobody knows how the germ got into St. Joseph’s operating room.

Allen says her surgeon was devastated by the infection. Hospital officials suggested that she might have carried the pathogen into the facility, on her skin.

If that were so, screening likely would have detected the germ and allowed doctors to eradicate it beforehand.

Cardiac patients like Allen are among the most vulnerable to MRSA infections and often face prolonged and expensive recoveries, medical research shows.

But St. Joseph didn’t test her for MRSA, according to medical records. When it comes to most cardiac patients, the hospital still doesn’t. On Friday, it said that policy is under review.

Who gets tested for MRSA, and who does not, is a medical game of chance.

Washington hospitals make their own rules. There are no federal or state mandates for screening.

The result is a haphazard array of infection-control policies that often fail to protect the most vulnerable patients, according to a Times survey of the state’s 25 largest hospitals.

MRSA infections often strike critically ill patients or those with weakened immune systems - patients typically treated in a hospital’s intensive-care unit.

But Swedish Medical Center in Seattle doesn’t routinely screen patients in its ICU. Instead, it screens patients having elective surgery.

Sacred Heart Hospital in Spokane does test ICU patients - but not those seeking elective surgery.

The University of Washington Medical Center tests only premature babies.

Valley Medical Center in Renton doesn’t routinely screen any patient group.

The bottom line is that most Washington patients don’t get tested.

Whether to test, and whom to test, are at the core of a bitter national debate within the U.S. health care system.

Those who oppose testing all patients often argue that it undermines patient safety to dedicate limited resources to just one germ.

The reality, they say, is that hospitals often lack the staff, lab resources or space to ramp up existing testing programs or isolate large numbers of patients.

Swedish Medical Center would be hard-pressed to screen its 41,000-plus admissions each year, officials said. Harborview Medical Center, the state’s most crowded hospital, doesn’t have enough private rooms to isolate every patient, officials said.

Some hospitals fear lawsuits. If they screened every patient, results would show who already had the germ upon admission - and who picked it up while in the hospital. Patients could then blame the hospital for their infections.

Federally funded researchers called MRSA a possible epidemic in the early 1980s, following a series of outbreaks in large hospitals nationally. Yet most Washington hospitals began limited screening only within the past three years, The Times found.

“Many hospitals have ignored MRSA for decades,” said Dr. William Jarvis, who retired in 2003 from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, where he was once acting director.

MRSA can cause painful and treatable skin lesions or slip into the blood. About 1 percent of infections prove fatal, while many others result in crippling injuries.

No one knows how many people carry the germ on their skin. Nationally, medical researchers have estimated that it’s 1 or 2 percent of the general population. Washington hospitals that have initiated selective screening have discovered significantly higher levels - up to 11 percent.

Some surgeons around Seattle so dread the pathogen that they order tests when hospitals won’t.

To control an infection, health officials need to know where it’s been. They need counts, patterns, examples. But in Washington, MRSA’s tracks have largely been obscured.

The state Department of Health asks physicians or medical examiners filling out death-certificate forms to give not only the primary cause of death, but the “chain of events” - the “diseases, injuries, or complications” - that contributed. Without such detail, these forms, when compiled in a database, may miss signs of emerging threats to public health.

But omissions undercut these certificates’ value.

In 2005, Brenda L. Smith, 47, of Puyallup, died at Swedish Medical Center/Providence in Seattle. For “final anatomical diagnosis,” her autopsy lists, at the top, MRSA pneumonia. But her death certificate - which relied on the autopsy report - says only pneumonia, with no mention of MRSA.

That same year, Willie Pompey, of Everett, died at age 58. His death certificate lists kidney failure, but does not account for an underlying reason. Pompey received a kidney transplant in 2002 at Virginia Mason Medical Center, but, because of a post-surgical MRSA infection, his body rejected the new organ. On his death certificate, MRSA is nowhere to be found.

How many examples are there like this? It’s impossible to say. Finding them requires working backward - as The Times had to do - scouring lawsuits or other documents for indications of someone with MRSA, then comparing them against the public health records to see what, if anything, is missing.

A Bainbridge Island plaintiffs’ lawyer, Christopher Otorowski, believes doctors may sometimes omit MRSA from death certificates because the infection is typically picked up in a hospital.

“Unless MRSA is the primary, explanatory cause of the death, I would think the physicians are going to be reluctant to put MRSA on the death certificate because it might implicate the hospital,” he says.

For years, the state health department released a database of death certificates that is used by academics, journalists and others to report on public-health issues. But the state excluded a key component, a field that included doctors’ notes that expanded on factors contributing to the person’s death. The Times discovered the omission this year and insisted upon a complete database.

This new database links 672 deaths to MRSA between 2003 and 2006. The old database didn’t attribute a single death to the germ. It couldn’t have. The state relies on a standardized coding system, used internationally, that has more than 13,000 diagnosis codes - but not a single one for MRSA.

To gauge the prevalence of MRSA, The Times also analyzed a second database, which compiles diagnoses and billing records for patients discharged from Washington hospitals. The state uses this data, which has no individual names, to identify health trends and to analyze costs.

But as with the death certificates, this data set proved incomplete. The Times found dozens of examples where alternative records showed a patient had been treated for MRSA, while the billing database made no mention of it.

Because of these holes, the number of MRSA cases and deaths generated by the newspaper’s analysis amounts to a minimum count, not a complete one.

Nationally, exact numbers are not available either, leaving public-health officials to estimate or extrapolate the scope of the epidemic.

To impede MRSA and other infectious germs, Washington hospitals typically rely on basic strategies - washing hands, isolating patients, sterilizing equipment.

But most of the state’s 25 largest hospitals have been cited for unsanitary conditions or failure to adhere to fundamental safety standards, state and federal regulatory reports since 2005 show.

Last year, at Spokane’s Holy Family Hospital, state Department of Health inspectors discovered the following:

A nurse entered Room 520 and dropped two packets of pills on the floor. Instead of throwing them out, she scooped up the packets and put them in a paper medication cup. She then pried the pills from the packets, dumped them into the contaminated cup and handed it to the patient.

An hour later, in a different room with an infectious patient, a staff member began to leave without washing hands. A second staffer tried to leave without discarding a contaminated gown. Both were headed for public areas of the hospital before state inspectors stopped them.

That afternoon, inspectors watched a phlebotomist draw blood from an infectious patient. Afterward, she brushed her gloved hands against items in a nearby supply cart - supplies destined for other patients.

In all, the four-day inspection cited seven staff members for violating basic infection-control standards, state records show.

Physicians can be the most lackadaisical about infection control.

In April 2006, doctors at the UW Medical Center carried personal items from home into sterile operating rooms and dropped them on the floor. These items included backpacks and satchels, made of porous materials friendly to germs. Hospital administrators told inspectors this was “common practice.”

In November 2006, a physician at St. Joseph Medical Center in Tacoma removed his surgical mask during an operation. He had complained it was uncomfortable. Hospital officials told inspectors the physician was a “repeat” violator and had been warned before to keep his mouth and nose covered.

In hospitals, the most common violation is the failure to wash hands upon entering or leaving a patient’s room.

In the worst cases, as few as 40 percent of staff members comply with hand-washing standards. Doctors are the worst offenders, according to confidential hospital records reviewed by The Times.

Even the best hospitals typically boast no better than 90 percent compliance - which means one out of 10 practitioners may have contaminated hands.

Hospitals remedied all violations spotted during the inspections, records show.

But these violations were all the more brazen because hospital officials - benefiting from a new law - knew the exact day that state inspectors were coming.

In the past, the state health department conducted surprise inspections to ensure that hospitals adhered to health and safety codes, from patient care to building maintenance.

But in 2002, the Washington State Hospital Association issued a 28-page report: “How Regulations are Overwhelming Washington Hospitals.” In it, hospital administrators claimed surprise inspections disrupted patient care.

In Olympia, lawmakers voted unanimously to eliminate surprise inspections starting in July 2004. Today, the Department of Health must provide four weeks’ notice - even the exact hour of arrival.

Hospital officials also had complained that some state inspectors were abrupt and unfriendly.

Lawmakers approved a Band-Aid: Hospital officials now can anonymously evaluate state regulators on whether they were polite enough.

The Legislature receives an annual compilation of these critiques. One hospital official wrote that state inspectors could “do a better job of highlighting the positive,” instead of just looking for problems.

Washington is the only state that legally empowers hospitals to rate the conduct of regulators, according to the Consumers Union, a nonprofit organization that monitors hospital-related legislation.

“What kind of message does that send?” said Lisa McGiffert, who directs the organization’s Stop Hospital Infections project.

Federally commissioned hospital inspectors began surprise inspections in 2004 - the same year Washington eliminated them.

The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations sets health-care standards and certifies hospitals to receive federal funding, such as Medicare. For decades, the commission had provided at least a month’s notice before inspections.

But dozens of hospitals exploited the advance notice to temporarily hire more staff, cart in rental medical equipment - which was returned when inspectors left - and conduct dramatic makeovers with fresh sheets and pillows, according to inspector general reports at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Responding to public criticism, the commission stopped giving notice.

In some Washington hospitals, makeovers now take place just before state inspections, three registered nurses told The Times. The hospitals beef up staffs during planned inspections and, in some cases, have hired extra cleaners to disinfect beds and equipment, the nurses said.

The state hospital association recognizes “more needs to be done” to combat MRSA and is pushing to standardize patient-isolation procedures and increase hand-hygiene compliance, association president Leo Greenawalt said.

When Chuck Velte first saw the woman at a flower show - sitting in a wheelchair, her right leg missing at the knee - he tried not to stare.

It was the spring of 2006, and Velte had knee surgery pending. He couldn’t help but wonder: What happened to the woman’s leg?

So he asked.

“She said that her knee was infected after routine surgery. She called the germ MRSA. I’d never heard of it,” says Velte, who’s now 64.

“I looked at her missing leg and was scared: This could be me.”

Velte asked medical practitioners at Valley Orthopedic Associates in Renton about the germ’s threat. He says they told him: Don’t worry. This infection targets people with weak immune systems, and you’re healthy.

Velte was unconvinced. A former senior analyst at Boeing, he launched into research. He learned patients could infect themselves if dormant MRSA germs were on their skin. The bacterium could drop into a wound during surgery and touch off numerous complications, even death.

Velte didn’t know it, but at least 66 patients who underwent joint surgery the year before suffered amputation of legs, arms or fingers after contracting MRSA, a Times analysis of Washington hospital-billing records shows. For the past decade, the number of such patients stands at 512.

But Velte’s research also turned up a simple safeguard: a nasal swab test that can detect if someone’s a carrier.

Velte demanded to be screened. Doctors questioned its need, but sent him to a laboratory at Valley Medical Center in Renton, where the surgery was scheduled.

“I get there, and my knees are killing me, and the lab guys said they don’t do a MRSA test. They told me to go home,” Velte says.

Velte hobbled to the hospital’s executive offices and plopped in a chair. “I want to see the highest-ranking person here,” he recalls saying. “I’m not leaving here until I get a MRSA test.”

An apologetic administrator arranged for a test. Results arrived four days later.

“I tested positive for MRSA,” Velte says. “My doctor was stunned. He said that if he had operated, it could have been catastrophic.”

To get rid of the germ, Velte scrubbed himself with over-the-counter soap containing chlorhexidine, an antibacterial chemical. He also wiped his house down with bacteria-killing bleach.

He was screened for MRSA again, was cleared and underwent surgery. It was successful.

A year later, MRSA invaded Velte’s life again.

His 92-year-old mother, Rita, lived at a nursing home in Eau Claire, Wis. Last fall, Velte learned she had a festering wound, resembling a giant boil, on her buttocks. He demanded a MRSA test.

“After what I’d been through, I knew it was a possibility,” he says.

A lab report confirmed his suspicions. His mother was infected with invasive MRSA, the worst kind. Within two days, she was gripped by pneumonia, followed by sepsis - blood poisoning - which reached into every vital organ, medical records show.

She suffered a fatal heart attack on Nov. 1 - less than two weeks after she was diagnosed with the germ.

Yet, MRSA did not appear on her death certificate. The official causes of death were heart attack, pneumonia and sepsis.

Velte says he demanded a correction - the truth. After reviewing medical records, the certifying doctor added MRSA.

“I wonder,” Velte says, “how many people die of MRSA and nobody ever knows.”

What to Know When it Comes to MRSA

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

In the past few weeks, reports of MRSA cases have become more common throughout the United States and Europe. Staph infections like this are scary buggers, but should we be concerned about a pandemic?

The answer is no. Which isn’t to say that you shouldn’t be taking precautions to prevent the spread of infection, but Dr Chris Ohl reports that the number of cases for MRSA in the past 3-5 years have not increased exponentially. The concern from Health Officials is not in the number of cases reported about the infection, but the lack of knowledge on the part of both hospital employees and the general public on what to look for. The sad truth is that many times a case for MRSA is misdiagnosed as a spider bite or even an ingrown hair that’s become infected.

It’s important to know what to look for, and the proper way to go about treating symptoms. MRSA infections start out as small red bumps, often resembling pimples or spider bites that can quickly turn into deep, painful abscesses.

You should contact a doctor if:

  • You or your child has an area of skin that’s red, painful, swollen, and/or filled with pus
  • You or your child has inflamed skin and is also feverish or feels sick
  • Skin infections seem to be passing from one family member to another or if two or more family members have skin infections at the same time

MRSA is most often colonized within and around the nose, and like many infectious diseases people can have it without ever suffering symptoms. You shouldn’t wait for an outbreak to start taking preventative measures to keep from spreading or contracting the infection. None of these actions are extreme, or require a lot of effort.

  • Keeping your hands clean with an antibacterial soap such as GymSoap. Hands should be washed after every visit to the restroom, whenever food or trash is handled, or after sneezing/coughing.
  • Do not share personal items like towels, razors, loofahs, clothing, or sheets. Be sure to wipe down athletic equipment with sanitizing wipes before and after each use.
  • Shower immediately after exercising (whether it be at the gym or on the field). GymSoap is a highly effective body soap that kills 99.9% of germs and bacteria.
  • Keep open wounds covered, and don’t participate in games, practices or other events that involve physical contact if there’s a risk that your open wound(s) will become exposed.
  • Sanitize your linens. If you have a cut or sore, wash towels and bed linens in a washing machine set to the “hot” water setting (with added bleach, if possible) and dry them in a hot dryer. Wash gym and athletic clothes after each wearing.
  • If you have a skin infection that requires treatment, ask your doctor if you should be tested for MRSA. Doctors may prescribe drugs that aren’t effective against antibiotic-resistant staph, which delays treatment and creates more resistant germs. Testing specifically for MRSA may get you the specific antibiotic you need to effectively treat your infection.
  • Use antibiotics appropriately. When you’re prescribed an antibiotic, take all of the doses, even if the infection is getting better. Don’t stop until your doctor tells you to stop. Don’t share antibiotics with others or save unfinished antibiotics for another time. Inappropriate use of antibiotics, including not taking all of your prescription and overuse, contributes to resistance. If your infection isn’t improving after a few days of taking an antibiotic, contact your doctor.

Embrace Good Hygiene

Monday, October 13th, 2008

Stanisław Jerzy Lec, a Polish poet, once said “All is in the hands of man. Therefore, wash them often.” Now, more than ever, does that statement hold true. With germs and infections spreading so easily these days, it’s important to take preventative measures to keep oneself safe.

Since the death of Alonzo Smith in the past week, several more cases of MRSA have popped up across Central Florida, including another Liberty High School student. The school, which had been declared clean by Osceola County health officials, has local parents worried and uncertain what to expect. Other cases that have appeared include one student at Stanton Weirsdale Elementary in Marion County, and four employees of Harris Corporation in Brevard County.

MRSA is contracted through skin/skin contact, as well as encounters with cuts and sores. There are several things that one can do to help prevent the spread of this disease.

  • Keep hands clean by thoroughly washing regularly with an anti-bacterial soap like GymSoap®.
  • Keep cuts and sores clean and bandaged until they have properly healed.
  • Avoid contact with with other people’s wounds or bandages.
  • Do not pop pimples or boils, this should only be done by a doctor.
  • Avoid sharing personal items such as towels, razors, sponges or loofahs.
  • Central Florida Highschool Student Killed by MRSA

    Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

    Germs are everywhere, and the truth is that they’re not entertaining little green cartoons that sound like construction workers from Long Island. The family, friends, and school mates of Alonzo Smith learned that the hard way when the high school footballer died over the weekend from a staph infection known as MRSA. The acronym, which stands for Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, is a skin infection that commonly resides on the skin or in a person’s nose. It is rarely deadly, but when left untreated can cause serious health issues.

    While an investigation is underway, it is unlikely that officials will be able to determine exactly where Smith contracted the infection. Bacteria is not limited to direct contact from an infected individual, but can be contracted off of common surfaces such as counter tops, door knobs, or exercise equipment.

    Most MRSA infections can still be treated by antibiotics, but there are steps that can be taken to help prevent someone from contracting the infection to begin with. Always wear clean exercise clothing, and never reuse a towel without washing it. Damp towels are prime spots for germs and infections to gather, especially when left overnight in a locker. Use an antibacterial and antifungal soap like GymSoap when showering to help stop the disease before it develops. You should wash your hands regularly as our hands touch more than any other part of the body, and never share cleaning equipment such as towels, loofahs, or razors.

    It’s important to know what to look for if you do run the risk of contracting MRSA or any other staph infection. With MRSA the infection often appears as pustules or boils that are hot, red, swollen, painful or have pus and can be accompanied by a fever. They most often occur at places where there have been cuts or abrasions.

    Liberty High School, where Smith was a student, will be holding a ceremony on Friday night during their homecoming football game to honor the senior. His funeral is scheduled for 11 a.m. Saturday at Assembly of God Church in Lake Wales. Well liked and known for being a good kid, it is certain that Alonzo Smith will be missed among the Kissimmee community that he has been a part of.