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MRSA Colonisation

Sharing a towel - it could make you sick

How do we become colonised?
Where do the bacteria colonies live in our body?
How widespread is it?
How likely is it that you will become ill?
How can you be decolonised?

Read on for the answers and scroll down for links to the latest news on all aspects of colonisation.

Towel

MRSA Colonisation is the term used to describe those who have the bacteria on or in their bodies but have not yet become ill through the infection of a wound or other area of tissue. That initial colonisation could take place through something as simple as sharing a towel.

The staph aureus family of infectants live on the skin of over 30% of the population. The strains that are drug resistant and often detected in hospitals are found on the skin of about 1%, although pockets of the population can have much higher colonisation rates. (These include hospital staff, vetinary personnel and care home residents)

Those who have the community strains that often infect otherwise healthy people may be part of infection clusters based around social groups living in close proximity or sharing common facilities. These include needle injecting drug users, military staff, prison inmates and warders, students in residence halls, children in day care, those involved in or patronising the sex industry, promiscous heteroseuals and homosexuals and people involved in contact sports. In time people outside these high risks groups will start to become carriers as the bacteria infiltrates all aspects of a society.

People who contract MRSA in hospital may have bacteria transferred into their wound as a result of nursing or surgical proceedures. This is why hand hygiene is so important as the hand can be the transport that carries the bacteria to the wound area. MRSA is also thought to be airborne and can be part of dust or dead skin residues or in the moisture emitted when a person sneezes.

Colonisation is usually a more passive state however when the person is well but has become a carrier of the bacteria. It often resides in the groin area, under the arms but especially in the nose. It can set up camp in the throat or some times in the intestine.

(More to come)

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