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MRSA Basic Facts

Understanding MRSA. (Mersa or Staph)

Ask an MRSA question * MRSA News * MRSA in your locality

Jsw_mrsacouk_1_2 MRSA Watch has gathered over 4500 articles on MRSA into a unique directory - see A-Z  guide in right hand column. Click on coloured text in the MRSA Basics guide below for more information on a specific subject.  The site is updated daily. Scroll down past the guide for specific information about aspects of MRSA

We also have an information packed audio introduction will help you grasp the key facts and the key issues surrounding MRSA

Simple staph aureus (SA) bacteria, (mrsa is not a virus), can be found on the bodies of up to 30% of the general population. It caused many problems before the use of antibiotics made wound recovery a safer process. Hospital acquired staph is generally resistant to several antibiotics but especially Methicillin, hence the name MRSA. This is found in about 1% of the population but in some pockets of the population this figure can be much higher.

Super_bug_091404Image from Komo News

Community Acquired MRSA (CA MRSA) is a different strain of MRSA, mainly causes skin infections and is treatable by more drugs at this time. CA MRSA (sometimes known as Mersa or Mursa) is more infectious and some strains of it are more destructive - should it become resistant to more antibiotics it could pose a considerable public health risk. Many people carry or are 'colonised' by staph bacteria but only suffer when they have another illness.

The colonisation stage carries no symptoms. Many only suffer MRSA as an infection of an existing wound. In recent times however some types of CA MRSA have begun to cause significant skin infections in otherwise healthy patients. The entry point is often a tiny cut, graze or exisiting skin condition.

How do people catch MRSA?
There are several ways it is believed to spread.

  • Hand carriage - this is why hospital staff are encouraged to wash their hands after each patient.
  • Contaminated surfaces - this is why clean hospital wards are vital.
  • Via medical instruments - this is why many now have special coatings or have silver elements. This discourages lingering residues and/or kills external infection entering the wound
  • Via airborne particles - MRSA often resides in the nasal passages and can spread with colds and flu as a secondary infection that may be dormant for some while.
  • Shared items - Families or other close knit groups sharing a facility such as military personnel, a sports team or prison inmates may share hygiene items such as towels etc. This is another vector for the spread of the bacteria
  • Needles - Drug users sharing needles may be passing on MRSA alongside HIV or Hepatitis C. The same could be said of tattoo artists who do not have strict hygiene regimes.
  • Sexual Intimacy - the nose, groin and underarms are key colonisation areas for the bacteria. Sex workers and the habitually promiscous will be super spreaders in a society in much the same way as they are for AIDS.

How is it treated?
There are 3 key treatment regimes that are commonly used.

  • For those who are colonised - a nasal treatment and a skin wash. This is often the strategy when MRSA is rare or prior to an operation as a means of preventing infection. Where MRSA is common some doctors will not suggest decolonisation as many will be recolonised within months within the local community. Some deep seated - throat and intestine - colonisation may require drug treatment.
  • For those who have a potential or active bloodstream infection - drugs such as Vancomycin, Linezolid or Daptomycin.
  • For those with infected wounds - special honey, silver bandages, garlic preparations and tea tree oil are all believed to be effective in killing MRSA in a wound. Many who have the skin infections common with CA MRSA simply need incision and drainage of the infected area and good hygiene while it heals. Antibiotics are not always needed.

How can it be prevented
The media often focus on clean hospitals and clean hands as a key to combating MRSA. Others believe that this will only cut cases by 30% and that a diverse strategy is vital and will include:

What can I do

  • Stay informed - this site and several others can help you do this. The A-Z guide in the right hand column will give you in depth information on over 50 aspects of MRSA from over 4000 articles, news items and academic papers.
  • Ask others via our MRSA Watch forum
  • Act locally by becoming involved in patient advocacy or patient/hospital forums
  • Seek justice - do you need to take legal action because of neligence or do we all need to speak up for communities who are being hit by CA MRSA but are underinsured and often powerless.

MRSA Headlines

Doctors trying to say don't panic, but do be worried re MRSA

Link: Health | "Superbug" — what you need to know about MRSA | Seattle Times Newspaper.

Last month, a report in the Journal of the American Medical Association estimated that in 2005, some 94,000 people were infected by the most serious form of MRSA infections, and one in five died. Since then, public-health officials have been singing out of both sides of their mouths. On one hand, they want to reassure people: Like many germs, MRSA is common. Many of us carry it around on our skin and in our noses, and it lives on surfaces from athletic gear to fabric. Outside the hospital, it's not hard to avoid, but if you get it, you'll likely just get a treatable skin infection. On the other hand, the public-health gurus want to sound an alarm. They warn that MRSA is a symptom of a larger danger: the great number of germs worldwide becoming increasingly resistant to antibiotics. "The prospect that effective antibiotics may not be available to treat seriously ill patients in the near future is real," says Dr. Jeff Duchin, communicable-diseases chief for Public Health — Seattle & King County.

Understanding MRSA

Attack of the Superbugs: The Spread of Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria

Link: ABC News:

     Drug-resistant bacteria are spreading into our communities and infecting the wounds of unsuspecting people. It's not the plot of a B-rated movie, but what is actually happening in many U.S. cities, and it is causing much alarm in the medical community. Previously, hospitals were the only places you would need to be concerned about these stubborn bacteria, but in a study published on April 7, 2005 in The New England Journal of Medicine, infections caused by one such superbug, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), was studied in Atlanta, Baltimore and Minnesota hospitals. Over the course of a year, a surprisingly large number of MRSA infections, somewhere between 8 and 20 percent, was the result of community-acquired, out-of-hospital, infections. Since these bacteria have survived traditional antibiotic treatments and multiply to create even more resistant bacteria, they can be tougher to treat. This study shows that it is important for both doctors and patients to keep a close watch on the treatment of even routine infections.

Click the link above for a well written guide to MRSA

Q&A: MRSA

Link: SocietyGuardian.co.uk | Society | Q&A: MRSA.

Superbugs - including MRSA and the virulent stomach bug clostridium difficile - cost the NHS £1bn a year and though most cases are reported in hospitals they can be caught anywhere. What are these infections, and what can be done to halt their spread? David Batty explains

Click the link above for the whole article - very helpful overview

MRSA is major heart infection factor

Link: Endocarditis infection

"The finding of S aureus as the leading cause of IE differs from previous reports and may be due in part to increasing rates of staphylococcal bacteremia related to health care contact in industrialized nations," the authors write. "S aureus is now the most common cause of IE in many areas of the developed world. Patients with IE due to S aureus exhibit distinct characteristics compared with patients with IE due to other pathogens. Health care–associated IE is emerging as the most common form of S aureus IE and has distinct features compared with more familiar forms of S aureus IE, such as community-acquired injection drug use-associated infection. MRSA is now encountered internationally as a relatively common cause of IE and is associated with persistent bacteremia. Future investigations are required to identify better treatment and prevention strategies for this serious and common consequence of medical progress," the authors conclude.

MRSA - Here to stay?

REGENT Antiseptics
A fine, detailed overview of MRSA, Hygiene with insight into the different strains of MRSA and their epidemic nature. Highly reccomended

Why is MRSA a concern?

Medical News Today What is MRSA? Why is MRSA a concern? How is MRSA treated? A helpful plain English guide

MRSA Information guide

About.com
A helpful directory of MRSA sites, directories etc

CDC | MRSA - Methicillin-Resistant S. Aureus

CDC | MRSA - Methicillin-Resistant S. Aureus
This is the official briefing from the key agency and contains links to several key sites and web pages

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MRSA TV

  • How To Use This Site

    A short introduction from Dave Roberts

Please Note

  • The most recent version of this site is here

MRSA - Audio Introduction

  • This 12 minute introduction will help you grasp the key facts and the key issues surrounding drug resistant staph aureus (mersa, mursa)


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