National Nurses United

Registered Nurse magazine August 2006

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10 R E G I S T E R E D N U R S E W W W . C A L N U R S E S . O R G A U G U S T 2 0 0 6 R oya l m a r i n e r i c h a r d c a m p b e l l - s m i t h , a buffed 18-year-old, was completing his basic training in Devon, England when he got a few scratches on his leg. Two days later, he was dead. Gloria Bonaffini checked into a Bridgeport, Conn. hospi- tal for a routine bypass operation. Doctors told her husband she would be out in a week. She stayed 448 days, finally dying of an acute infection she caught during her surgery. Three children—ages 15 months, nine months, and 17 months—were admitted to a Chicago-area hospital with res- piratory problems. They were all dead of toxic shock within a week. In all three cases, the killer was the same: methicillin- resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, a drug-resistant bacterium that first appeared in the early '90s. Since then it has seared a lethal path through hospitals, nursing homes, and started appearing in day care centers, prisons, and gym- nasiums. In 1974, only two percent of Staphylococcus infec- tions were methicillin-resistant. By 1995, 22 percent were classified MRSA. Last year it was 60 percent. Five players from the Washington Redskins football team even caught it from their training facilities during the 2004 and 2005 season. The New Germ Warfare BY CONN HALLINAN AND CARL BLOICE Antibiotic misuse and hospital practices to boost profits are spreading ever-deadly bacteria into our communities. But simple hygiene and better staffing may be the best weapon yet.

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