MRSA may accompany hospital patients to home
by Poonam Singhal

Infection with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) appears relatively common among patients discharged from the hospital into home health care, revealed by researchers. In addition, about one-fifth of infected patients may transmit the organism to other people in their households.
The study is published in the August 10/24 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
MRSA is common in hospitals in most countries, and as the incidence of infection increases new patterns of spread are emerging.
"Thus, in the last decade, community-acquired MRSA strains have caused hospital outbreaks and sometimes replaced older strains previously responsible for hospital-acquired MRSA infections," the authors write. "Conversely, hospital-acquired MRSA strains can spread outside the health care system."
Jean-Christophe Lucet, M.D., Ph.D., of Bichat-Claude Bernard Hospital, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, France, and colleagues studied 1,501 adult inpatients in French hospitals who in 2003 and 2004 were screened for MRSA before discharge to home health care. Patients were followed up and screened for clearance of MRSA every three months for one year, and household contacts were also screened for presence of the organism.
MRSA was identified in a total of 191 of the 1,501 patients (12.7 percent) before discharge from the hospital to home health care. Of the 148 who were followed up, 75 were found to have cleared the organism within one year. Patients who were more self-sufficient in daily activities appeared more likely to experience clearance of MRSA.
The 191 patients with MRSA had 188 household contacts who participated in the study. Of these, 36 (19.1 percent) acquired MRSA, although none developed an infection. Household contacts who were older and who played a role in providing health care for the patient appeared more likely to be colonized with MRSA. "Sharing the same bed or bedroom, in contrast, was not associated with MRSA transmission," the authors write. "Thus, MRSA may be preferentially transmitted to contacts who are at high risk for hand contamination during care procedures."
Because none of the household contacts who acquired MRSA developed an infection, it is unclear whether this transmission represents a serious public health problem, the authors note. However, to prevent spread of the organism, "household contacts should apply infection control measures similar to those recommended in the hospital setting."
(Poonam Singhal -- sub-editor compiled and published
MRSA may accompany hospital patients to home at HealthNewsTrack on August 10, 2009 sourced from Archives of Internal Medicine - http://archinte.ama-assn.org/)
MRSA - recent articles and current news stories:
-
New strain of MRSA discovered, found in both humans and dairy cows-
Comprehensive approach reduces MRSA in french hospitals-
Sepsis and pneumonia cost $ 8.1 billion to treat-
Hospital superbug MRSA diffused by patients-
MRSA infection increases hospital cost $60000 per patientMRSA article/news source:
Read more health articles from
Archives of Internal Medicine and
health articles from USA.
MRSA - search related terms:
Community acquired MRSA,
Health care,
Home health care,
Hospital,
Infection,
MRSA,
Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus,
Patient,
MRSA books,
Searched keywords: mrsa (49), Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (5),
Mission
Health Newstrack is dedicated to serve recent and updated health & medical research, events/news, views/reviews to its subscribers and free access to general public, health & medical professionals, and other health seekers worldwide online with a user-friendly system.
Subscribe to Health News by Email
Current news
Hospital-acquired MRSA carriage was common at discharge to home health care and was frequently prolonged. Transmission occurred in nearly 20% of household contacts and was associated with older age and participation in health care of the index patient.
About MRSAMethicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), also known as oxacillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (ORSA), multiple-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, CA-MRSA (community-acquired MRSA) and HA-MRSA (hospital-acquired MRSA), is a biological agent responsible for difficult-to-treat infections in humans. (MSSA is Methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus.)