MRSA INFECTION
Why the recent upswing in these particularly MRSA infection among the young and healthy? A
key factor in the development of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus, MRSA, is the over-prescription of antibiotics, said Dr. Wade
Sellers, Northwest Georgia Public Health director.
Because patients are impatient
to get well, many doctors today prescribe antibiotics when they are
unnecessary and unhelpful, such as for viral infections.
“The big message we
would like to get out is that doctors should prescribe antibiotics only
for organisms that are susceptible to antibiotics,” he said. “People
shouldn’t request them in inappropriate situations.” Because of this
overuse problems occur when trying to clear an MRSA infection.
It is also
important for doctors to perform a sensitivity test when they treat
patients with MRSA for this reason. They need to test the strain to
find out what antibiotics the MRSA infection is responsive to.
Also, if patients quit taking
antibiotics before they are finished with their entire course, they may
encourage the growth of antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria, she
said. An incomplete course may leave some of the bacteria alive and it
is encouraged to develop a resistance to the antibiotic that it was
treated with.
However, the most sure-fire
way to prevent MRSA infection is also the oldest in the book, Sellers
said. “Hand hygiene is the best prevention,” he said. “Most of it gets
passed from hand to hand.” Once it’s too late and a child or adult already believes they are infected, they need to go seek medical attention.
Each case is individual and unique, and medical evaluation is a necessity.
Patients with MRSA Infections
Patients
with infections due to Staphylococcus aureus often need antibiotics.
Infections due to normal strains of Staphylococcus aureus are often
treated with flucloxacillin but this is ineffective against an MRSA
Infection. An MRSA infection is also resistant to such MRSA Antibiotics as erythromycin and ciprofloxacin.

Vancomycin and Teicoplanin are however still effective in treating an MRSA infection and are therefore often used. They
can obly be used in patients who are hospitalised as they need to be
given by infusion or injection.Vancomycin is very painful if injected
into mucle and so is normally given slowly by infusion. This does not
occur however with teicoplanin which may be safely administered by
injection into muscle or rapid infusion into a vein.
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Sometimes an MRSA infection
may be resistant to vancomycin or teicoplanin and when this occurs then
it makes treatment a lot more serious. VRSA when it occurs can cause
major problems for doctors trying desperately to clear an MRSA infection
in a weak patient. At present many other drugs are being tested
for use if and when Vancomycin becomes totally innefective.
Patients colonised with MRSA
If
a patient is colonised with MRSA the an antibiotic called mupirocin
applied onto their skin called Bactroban. This should clear the MRSA
infection and reduces the risk of the bacteria spreading to other areas
of the body, where they might cause more mrsa infection. The problem is that some MRSA infections are now getting resistant to that antibiotic.
Chlorhexidine
is often used for patients who are colonised with MRSA to wash
their hair and skin and stop the spread of the MRSA infection
STOP the spread of MRSA INFECTION
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Antibacterrial soap and disposable towels should be used at all times by hospital staff
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Patients infected or colonised with an MRSA infection should be kep seperate from other patients
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An
area where an MRSA patient has been looked after should be scrupulously
cleaned afterwards as MRSA can survive in bed linen and even mops.
-
When
dealing with a patient with an MRSA infection hospital staff should
wear disposable gowns and gloves and dispose of them BEFORE leaving the
room.
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