US report shows a drop in dangerous drug-resistant staph in hospital or health care settings

By Lindsey Tanner, AP
Tuesday, August 10, 2010

US sees drop in dangerous hospital staph illnesses

CHICAGO — Aggressive, drug-resistant staph infections caught in hospitals or from medical treatment are becoming scarcer, another sign of progress in a prevention effort that has become a national public health priority.

The decline was seen in a federal study of methicillin-resistant staph, or MRSA. The bug often causes only a boil or skin infection. But researchers in the study focused on invasive cases that can become deadly, invading the bloodstream, flesh, lungs and bones.

Researchers found that in nine metro areas, cases of MRSA (MUR’-suh) fell about 16 percent between 2005 and 2008. That translates to a drop from about 32 cases per 100,000 to 26 cases per 100,000 people.

The results suggest aggressive efforts to stop the germ from spreading are working, researchers said. Such efforts include better hand-washing by doctors and nurses, and testing for MRSA when patients are admitted to the hospital.

“We’re very encouraged by the results,” said Dr. Alexander Kallen of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the study’s lead author. But he added, “It’s still too early to celebrate. A lot of work needs to be done about better ways to eliminate MRSA.”

The researchers focused on invasive MRSA in hospital patients or those who recently got treatment in a hospital or other health-care setting, including kidney dialysis patients.

This decline in cases follows another CDC report last year that found invasive MRSA infections in intensive care units had fallen.

While the overall rate declined, skin and soft tissue infections remained mostly unchanged; these include fearsome flesh-eating infections that can be disfiguring and even deadly. Still, these cases were rare in the study.

Also, the report didn’t address MRSA infections that occur in schools, locker rooms and other ordinary settings. Some reports have suggested those may be on the rise.

Cases in the community are “a tougher nut to crack” because there’s more uncertainty about what makes people outside health-care settings vulnerable to MRSA, said Dr. Jaime Belmares, an infectious disease specialist at Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood, Ill.

Loyola is among hospitals around the country that have begun testing all incoming hospital patients for MRSA, and then isolating and treating these who have it. Belmares said incidence of MRSA at his hospital has fallen since it launched universal testing in 2007.

Healthy people commonly carry staph germs on their skin and in the nose. Overuse of antibiotics has made some strains tough to fight when they cause illness.

An earlier CDC report on invasive diseases estimated that there were more than 90,000 cases of MRSA nationwide in 2005. Kallen and colleagues didn’t offer a national estimate.

Their report is in Wednesday’s Journal of the American Medical Association. A JAMA editorial said the report highlights an important lesson — that understanding of MRSA incidence is somewhat limited and that better surveillance is needed. Government monitoring of the disease should expand beyond the nine regions studied to include rural areas and eventually all 50 states, the editorial said.

Online:

JAMA: jama.ama-assn.org

CDC: www.cdc.gov

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