Nov. 11, 2007
MRSA: Fighting The Superbug
As Reports Of Infection Rise, Expert Says More Research Is Needed To Find The Root Cause
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Play CBS Video Video MRSA Disinfections Useless? Health officials tell Lesley Stahl disinfecting buildings after MRSA outbreaks is not only expensive, but also ineffective.
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Video Lesley Stahl's Notebook Lesley Stahl discusses her report on MRSA, a dangerous form of staph infection that has mutated, making it resistant to many common forms of treatment.
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Video Controlling The Superbug Researchers struggle to control a deadly, drug-resistant superbug known as MRSA that has caused fear across the country. Lesley Stahl reports.
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(AP / CBS)
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News Tools MRSA Q&A Answers to commonly asked questions about methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus skin infections.
"They would get an antibiotic that belonged to the penicillin group of antibiotics. We can’t do that anymore. We’ve abandoned that approach," Daum explained.
Daum told Stahl that treatment approach was totally abandoned, as he already knew it wasn't going to work.
Back in 2004, few doctors had heard of community-based MRSA. That’s when 13-year-old Nicholas Johnson of Stafford, Texas, got a football injury. His parents, Janet and Dale, took him to the pediatrician.
"They diagnosed it at that time as a bad shoulder sprain," Nicholas' dad remembered.
Asked what they gave him for that, the teen's mom told Stahl, "Well, they just said to put his arm in a sling and take ibuprofen for pain."
That was on a Thursday. By Friday night, the Johnsons were in the emergency room at Texas Children's Hospital. Nicholas' temperature had spiked to 104.6.
"They gave us some antibiotics and some pain pills. So we took him home. I thought, 'Well, in a couple of days the antibiotics will start working and he’ll start feeling better,'" his mom recalled.
But his elbows and knees swelled up as the infection spread, and the Johnsons rushed Nicholas back to the hospital. "He was in respiratory failure. And they needed to put him on a ventilator," his mom recalled.
"You must have just been terrified, to say the least," Stahl asks.
"To say the least," his father remembered. "Actually, at one time, we were told that we needed to get family around, because he just might not make it."
But Nicholas did make it. After three operations and an intravenous antibiotic, Nicholas fought off the MRSA infection. The hospital report says "it’s a miracle he survived."
Asked if he's physically right back to where he was, Nicholas told Stahl, "My running’s not as good as it used to be."
He also lost all the hearing in his left ear, but otherwise he's in great shape and loves to show off his scars.
The antibiotic that saved Nicholas was Vancomycin, used as the drug of last resort in severe MRSA infections. To explain, Dr. Daum showed Stahl petri dishes with different strains of bacteria.
Around the disks of bacteria, Daum pointed out a cleared zone, where the bacteria had died off. Those bugs were susceptible to many antibiotics.
But another petri dish contained MRSA. "Here you can see there’s a very different result. There's no circles around these antibiotic disks," Daum pointed out. "Except for one. And this is Vancomycin."
"Oh. The last resort?" Stahl asked.
"So this strain is resistant to everything except the antibiotic of last resort," he explained.
Produced By Karen Sughrue
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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See all 124 CommentsThank you 60 minutes for finally eposing this superbug that the public needs to know about.
I now take an alkaline cocktail of nutrients several times a day,drink very alkaline water, and use highly concentrated garlic drops under my tongue and put cream on my mrsa on my skin. Both of these products are from allimed.
You might check out:
http://www.allimed.us
http://www.forum.mrsaresources.com
http://www.robprince.net/mrsa/forum.asp?page=1
http://www.earthclinic.com/CURES/MRSA.html
http://www.optimahealthusa.com/MRSA.html
If I screwed up the links, email me.
"Phage therapy" was being used in u.s. to kill bacteria until penicilin was discovered along with other antibiotics. It is being used in the republic of georgia and other parts of the world. It needs to be brought back to the u.s. fast! If you check out the websites above, 1 lady states in 1 of the forums that she went to the phage center.
check out: http://www.phagetherapycenter.com
Anybody want a Nobel Prize....bring back PHAGE THERAPY to the U.S., Man From Mars With Mrsa
Email: uranusisnice@yahoo.com
We have over treated, guys, and if nobody leans on the WHO, CDC, USAMRID--might as well kiss our netherparts goodbye--sorry, I am a nurse so I know.
Fosshield antimicrobial technology
continously kills MRSA on fabric
natural fiber of silver and copper
soon to be in home/office products
I would have been a great follow on for the piece.
Check us out at fossmfg.com
Why are we throwing antibiotics at an antibiotic resistant infection? Fuel to the fire.
Over use of antibiotics for prevention(?) is what has got us into this mess. We must make wise choices with our consumer dollars to but organic meat and back way off of using drugs.
Nutrition is the best way to be healthy. We are not drug deficient, we are nutritionally deficient.
his19581952@yahoo.com (put MRSA in subject)
Any any event Vital Oxide is awesome at killing MRSA. The company also has a high-tech way of applying the disinfectant at schools and hospitals by using an electrostatic sprayer. See vitaloxide.com for more info.
The evolution of the MRSA bacteria is definitely an issue we are going to have to deal with. We need to do constant testing of what works and what doesn''t, as well as, how it gets transmitted.
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dhqp/ar_mrsa_in_schools.html
Thank you for addressing these inaccuracies.
Sincerely,
A. Donnelly, RN
The disease is truly horrible and painful. The treatment is just as horrible and the side effects of Vancomycin are horrendous. Eventually I was able to tolerate the treatments but I would say that initially I felt like I was on cancer chemotherapy. There are also many potential long-term consequences for those of us who have survived. Vancomycin can cause a lot of problems and blood work has to be done every couple days before and after treatment in order to check the levels.
If you are really interested in informing your audience, I would suggest that you go to the hospitals and really see patients at their worse and really show what MRSA looks like. See how sick people really are when they have it. Not just talk to people after the fact.
Disinfecting infected clothing, hospitals, nursing homes, schools, school buses, locker rooms, etc., is a very necessary thing that needs be done if MRSA has been verified. If no MRSA is present in a school, or work place, etc., then there is nothing at that point to worry about, however, once someone is infected then extra measures must be taken to ensure that MRSA does not spread in those locations.
Washing hands is important however hand soap does not kill MRSA. Hibiclens is the product that I use and I believe that bleach will kill MRSA.
It is very important that the public becomes aware of the severity of this Super Bug. Every time a program tries to get the point across it ends up doing more harm than good. One of your competitor%u2019s show did a program on MRSA and a doctor ended up saying that MRSA is nothing to worry about and that only .00000005 percent or so of people have gotten MRSA. He stated that the schools were going to make sure that the bathroom soap dispensers were never empty, as the solution to the problem.
The next fumble is the idea of covering up the infection and living your life normally is absurd. MRSA is all over ones body and clothing not just at the site of the abscess. It can be transferred to anything or anyone that is touched. If someone has a MRSA infection they should be quarantined until the infection is cured and no MRSA is present on the person.
Glenn Isralsky stated that he had MRSA when he was a sophomore. If it was truly MRSA that he had at the time then the school had the MRSA bacteria present since at least that time. Now an additional thirteen players on the team contracted it. If the school had dealt with it properly when he was a sophomore then maybe the others would not have gotten it.
The third fumble is where you state: %u201CWhen diagnosed before it gets into the bloodstream, MRSA is usually mild, and easily treated with general-purpose antibiotics.%u201D This is not true at all because MRSA infections are not easily treated with general-purpose antibiotics. If that were so, then it would not be MRSA. It would just be mild staph infection.
I had MRSA in 1995 and was hospitalized 4 times between January and August. After being in the hospital for a couple weeks each time, I was sent home with a PIC line in my arm and needed Vancomycin twice a day for weeks at a time. I had numerous operations to drain the abscesses ranging from the size of a quarter to the size of a grapefruit. The infection can grow from a pimple the size of your fingernail overnight to the size of your fist the next morning.
Two weeks after I went to visit my mother in the hospital I came down with MRSA, There is no doubt in my mind that I contracted it by touching something in the hospital. MRSA can be anywhere and on anything that any bacteria can live on.
Your first fumble was to rely on Dr. Dixon who is very wrong to say that MRSA can only be transferred from person to person. He had the field tested twice, taking samples of the AstroTurf near the goal line right after a big game. He says a few bacteria were found, but no MRSA "whatsoever.%u201D He says, "We can say unequivocally that MRSA staph does not live in AstroTurf,". I can%u2019t believe that you would show that ignorance on your show.
Hand washing is paramount. Cleaning schools, your wasting your time because as soon as the kids come back it starts all over again. Parents, please teach your children how to wash their hands properly, put a bottle of hand sanitizer in their back-packs. Most of all, keep cuts, scratches and scrapes COVERED, CLEAN and DRY until they''re completely healed. Even simple paper cuts should have a band-aide in place.
Bleach your home and surface areas regularly.
Dont share towels, razors and other personal products with others.
I hope this helps. It''s truly a very serious issue.
I''ve been battling staph infections for almost 3 yrs.
I became resistant to Vanco and had to use Daptomycin,
for close to 22 months straight via PICC line and then chest lines. I''ve had septicemia from it. The latest, surgery in July to remove it from my back and I''m still recovering w/ a 15 inch incision. I also disagree with Dr. Dixon and know this lives on surface areas. Shame on him for reporting falsely. Dr. Daum is awesome and in his report, completely honest and right on the mark. MORE RESEARCH! MRSA and other highly contagious staph infections are killing us and will continue to do so UNTIL someone finds a way to cure it. This has turned my life and that of my family upside down. It beats you to a pulp.
This is a epidemic and one NOT to be taken lightly.
Beverly Weisbach
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