FierceHealthcareFierceHealthITFierceHealthFinanceFierceEMRHospital ImpactFierceMobileHealthcare   FiercePharma

Report: MRSA moving out of healthcare settings

Tools
Tags
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
hospital acquired infections
American Medical Association (AMA)
methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)

While methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is already known to be a huge problem within hospitals, fewer professionals realize that it's also becoming a serious threat for the public at large, according to a new report. This is grim news, given that some non-hospital strains of MRSA may be even worse than the hospital-based variety.

In 2005, there were about 18,650 hospital deaths caused by approximately 94,360 invasive MRSA infections, according to projections by CDC researchers. In fact, MRSA has apparently become the leading cause of skin and soft-tissue infections among U.S. emergency department patients. To date, 85 percent of those were healthcare-related, according to the study, which appears this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

However, the number of MRSA infections contracted in other ways--such as in prisons or among athletes--is growing at a brisk clip.

To learn more about the MRSA public health threat:
- read this Modern Healthcare article
- read the JAMA article

Related Articles:
Study: MRSA infecting up to 5 percent of patients. Report
VA program slashes MRSA infection rates. Report
MRSA-CA danger to healthcare workers. Report
Study: Disinfectant cuts down on MRSA. Report

Bookmark and Share
Get Your FREE FierceHealthcare Email Newsletter:
Comments (1) | Post a comment

Comments

At our local hospital it is NOT uncommon for surgeons and his/her staff to come out of surgery and walk down to the cafeteria or go across the main street to eat lunch in local diners still in their scrubs. Then after their breaks they go right back into surgery again with the same scrubs, and other items on their heads and feet. No they do not change in to clean uninfected gowns ect. So not only do they infect the patient but if they had just performed surgery on an infected patient, then went to luch, it is possible they spread the infection to outside the hospital onto unexpecting civilians. This is not something that occurs once in a blue moon....it is every day. Can you imagine how many people these hospital employees come in contact every day? Then they still have on the same gown and go home to their house and families speading more infection germs...MRSA's.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

More information about formatting options

To combat spam, please enter the code in the image.