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A BELIEVER'S
GUIDE TO DISASTER PREPAREDNESS
MRSA
Entering US Hospitals Via Outpatients Is On The Increase
25 Nov 2009
A new study suggests that community-associated methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) is on the rise in US hospitals, and is
adding to rather than replacing the type of MRSA that arises within
hospitals, the hospital-associated MRSA (HA-MRSA); the study authors also
found that the entry route for CA-MRSA is via outpatients who pick up the
infection in places like gyms, schools and other public places.
The study is the work of Ramanan Laxminarayan, a senior fellow with the
Washington DC think-tank, Resources for the Future, and colleagues from
Princeton University and the University of Florida, and is available to read
online in the December issue of the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases,
published by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Laxminarayan, who is is also affiliated to Princeton, is the Principal
Investigator for Extending the Cure, a Resources for the Future project that
examines policy solutions to the growing problem of antibiotic resistance.
He told the media that:
"This emerging epidemic of community-associated MRSA strains appears to add
to the already high MRSA burden in hospitals."
For the study, Laxminarayan and colleagues analyzed data from more than 300
microbiology labs used by hospitals all over the US and found that between
1999 and 2006 there was a seven-fold rise in the proportion of
"community-associated" strains of MRSA in hospital outpatient units.
Since doctors and patients often move between inpatient and outpatient
units, this rise in outpatient MRSA is a significant threat to patient
safety in hospitals, suggested the researchers.
In summary, the results of the study showed that:
- From 1999 to
2006, the proportion of outpatients with staph who were infected with MRSA
went up more than 90 per cent.
- This MRSA
infected population now accounts for more than 50 per cent of all staph
infections.
- It is likely
that the rise in MRSA infections in almost entirely due to CA-MRSA.
- CA-MRSA rose
from 3.6 per cent of all MRSA infections in 1999 to 28.2 per cent in 2006,
a seven-fold increase.
- Similar
increases in inpatients suggest that these strains are spreading rapidly
in hospitals as well.
The researchers wrote that their
findings suggest "outpatients have become a major reservoir for CA-MRSA",
and contrary to other reports:
"Although CA-MRSA increases are associated with decreases in the frequency
of HA-MRSA in hospitals, the decreases are only modest."
"This finding suggests that instead of replacing HA-MRSA in the hospital,
CA-MRSA is adding to the overall presence of MRSA already found within the
hospital population," they concluded.
The MRSA "superbug" is a deadly infection-causing bacteria that has become
resistant to most common antibiotics; the community-associated strain now
poses a far greater threat to health than ever before, and it is making its
way into hospitals, said the authors.
MRSA attacks wounds and can trigger potentially fatal blood infections.
Although CA-MRSA tends to be less virulent and is generally more treatable
with antibiotics, it can still cause significant illness and deaths.
About 20,000 people in the US die every year from MRSA and there are more
than 63,000 deaths each year linked to hospital acquired infections that are
resistant to at least one antibiotic: this is more deaths than from AIDS,
traffic accidents or flu.
The additional costs of treating antibiotic resistant staph range from 3,000
to more than 35,000 US dollars per case, reports Resources for the Future.
Eili Klein, lead author of the study, who is also a researcher at Resources
for the Future, said:
"MRSA has generally been a significant problem only in hospitals."
"But the findings from this study suggest that there is a significant
reservoir in the community as well," added Klein, who suggests this
community reservoir leads to a dangerous spread of community-associated
strains from outpatient units into hospitals.
The researchers propose that the most effective way to contain MRSA and
other superbugs is through regional surveillance and infection control.
Klein said that the movement of CA-MRSA into hospitals also indicates an
urgent need for rapid tests that differentiate the MRSA strains. Some MRSA
strains, particularly the CA-MRSA ones are more susceptible to a wider range
of cheaper antibiotics.
Investing in rapid testing of MRSA strains could help hospitals deal
effectively with infections and reduce healthcare costs at the same time,
while also helping to preserve national supplies of antibiotics, wrote the
authors.
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/172102.php
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