September 12, 2009 9:01 PM

Staph Germs Found at West Coast Beaches

(AP)  Dangerous staph bacteria have been found in sand and water for the first time at five public beaches along the coast of Washington, and scientists think the state is not the only one with this problem.

The germ is MRSA, or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus - a hard-to-treat bug once rarely seen outside of hospitals but that increasingly is spreading in ordinary community settings such as schools, locker rooms and gyms.

The germ causes nasty skin infections as well as pneumonia and other life-threatening problems. It spreads mostly through human contact. Little is known about environmental sources that also may harbour the germ.

Finding it at the beach suggests one place that people may be picking it up, said Marilyn Roberts, a microbiologist at the University of Washington in Seattle.

"We don't know the risk" for any individual going to a beach, she said. "But the fact that we found these organisms suggests that the level is much higher than we had thought."

She presented results Saturday at an American Society for Microbiology conference in California. Last year, her team reported finding a different type of bacteria, enterococci, at five West Coast beaches. And earlier this year, University of Miami researchers reported finding staph bacteria in four out of 10 ocean water samples collected by hundreds of bathers at a South Florida beach.

Many communities also commonly restrict bathing at beaches because of contamination with fecal bacteria.

In the new study, researchers tested 10 beaches in Washington along the West Coast and in Puget Sound from February to September 2008. Staph bacteria were found at nine of them, including five with MRSA. The strains resembled the highly resistant ones usually seen in hospitals, rather than the milder strains acquired in community settings, Roberts said.

No staph was found in samples from two beaches in southern California.

People should not avoid beaches or be afraid to enjoy them, scientists say.

"It's probably prudent to shower when you come out" to lower the risk of bacteria staying on the skin, said Dr. Lance Peterson, a microbiologist at NorthShore University Health System in Illinois.

"Make sure you get all the sand off," and cover any open cuts or scrapes before playing in the sand, Roberts added. Digging in the sand or being buried in it seems to raise the risk of infection, she said.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by erasmus111 September 13, 2009 2:00 PM EDT
"People should not avoid beaches or be afraid to enjoy them, scientists say."


Are you kidding me?? People should be VERY AFRAID. You get "MRSA" and you have BIG problems.
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by erasmus111 September 13, 2009 1:56 PM EDT
by pete_in_az September 12, 2009 11:39 PM EDT
Damn canadians dumping their socialist medicine provided antibiotic laden poop in the puget sound.

(just kidding)



You better be. : )

I would say that your problem is coming from YOUR beaches, not ours. After all, you guys are still dumping sewer into your water, we are not.
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by debinok1 September 13, 2009 9:08 AM EDT
Oddly enough this is not surprising. Every advance in science and medicine has been countered by mutations and resistance of the diseases and germs. These things are living in water that is swimming with all sorts of drugs that have been developed to treat them. It seems the harder the scientific community tries to wipe out a disease or germ, the harder that disease or germ fights back, they mutate and develop resistance to the drugs designed to kill them. Eventually we will end up with something that is mutated and resistant to the point that it will wipe out a majority of the worlds population before we know what hit us, and there will be no way to stop it.
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by PsyOpsCmd September 13, 2009 7:26 AM EDT
Ok, so I go the beach...just shower this **** off....what if I am swimming or surfing and I get the water in my ears or mouth....I am a dead man.....we have polluted our planet to the point where we are no longer safe to enjoy the simple things as taking the family for a deadly day at the beach...hell sharks......bring 'em on!!
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by rwsmith29456 September 12, 2009 9:42 PM EDT
In the 1960's we dumped raw sewage into Charleston Harbor and at Isle of Palms, Folly and Sullivan's Island beaches right outside the mouth of the harbor we never got anything except ingesting too much salt water or sunburn. Nobody got anything worse than athlete's foot at the gym. Are we going back to the time when otherwise healthy people died from all types of bacterial infections? Honeymoon's over.
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by mljohns00 September 12, 2009 9:04 PM EDT
Nothing to worry about. Said a Government official.
Reply to this comment
by wyodutch September 12, 2009 8:51 PM EDT
Thank God that I live where I do.

Two hundred miles from the nearest 10,000-person anthill.
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