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Take Jessica Knowles of San Antonio whose entire family — even her dogs — have been battling on-again, off-again staph infections for several years.
"I've had it probably four to five times now. It's embarrassing, very embarrassing especially when it starts getting on my face," Knowles said. "It starts out feeling like you got bit by something, and you see a red spot like a pimple. It oozes. It doesn't stop."
Or Brandon Kafka of Seattle, who has battled several severe skin infections, including one that broke out across his face after he'd shaved.
"[It] hurt worse than anything I have ever felt," he said.
A study published today in the New England Journal of Medicine shows just how widespread the bug has become. Researchers took hundreds of skin samples from patients who'd visited 11 emergency rooms in the United States with skin or tissue infections. Laboratory analysis showed that 59 percent of the time the culprit was MRSA, meaning the bug has reached broadly into the general community — and that's bad news in the fight against antibiotic resistance.
Considered a "silent epidemic" by some public health experts, antibiotic-resistant staph infections are a growing threat to public health.
Almost 1 percent of the U.S. population — about 2 million people — carry drug-resistant staph without symptoms. The medical name for the infection is methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA.
Here's what you need to know about MRSA:
What exactly is MRSA?
MRSA is a kind of bacteria that causes staph infections. Because it is resistant to many antibiotics, MRSA can be very difficult to treat, resulting in major infections and even death.
Considered a "silent epidemic" by some public health experts, antibiotic-resistant staph infections are a growing threat to public health.
Almost 1 percent of the U.S. population — about 2 million people — carry drug-resistant staph without symptoms. The medical name for the infection is methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA.
Here's what you need to know about MRSA:
What exactly is MRSA?
MRSA is a kind of bacteria that causes staph infections. Because it is resistant to many antibiotics, MRSA can be very difficult to treat, resulting in major infections and even death.
Originally posted by Kruel
Hmmm, interesting. I've been getting little bite-like bumps on my hands lately. My mom's been getting them too, but she says it's an allergy from some tree. I should probably get it checked out.
Thanks for the info.
Originally posted by lombozo
theLibra - OMG!!
Thank god you made it through!
Originally posted by lombozo
Did you ever figure out how/where you contracted the infection?
Originally posted by lombozo
How long was the "allotted time"?
Originally posted by lombozo
Do you have any lingering symptoms?
Originally posted by lombozo
thelibra - man oh man. Yeah good call not sitting on public floors anymore.
Now how about these anti bacterial hand soaps - do they do anything when it comes to staph. Will it kill off the infection before it finds an entrance through the skin?