MRSA Found at West Coast Public Beaches Resembles Hospital Strain

Mike Ferrara
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Posted by Mike FerraraSeptember 15, 2009 10:32 PM

Researchers have found the antibiotic-resistant staph bacteria MRSA on public beaches along the Puget Sound in Washington State, and believe that sand and water at other public beaches may be home to the bacteria.

Earlier this year, MRSA was also discovered to be living on beaches in South Florida.

Community-acquired infections in people without risk factors such as poor hygiene are a growing concern, but little is known about environmental sources of MRSA, says Marilyn Roberts, PhD, an environmental health scientist at the University of Washington in Seattle.

Roberts and colleagues tested marine water and sand samples from beaches along the Puget Sound in Washington from February to September 2008.

Staph bacteria were found at nine of 10 beaches tested. Five of the beaches harbored strains of multidrug-resistant staph.

To the researchers' surprise, most of the samples "looked more like hospital-acquired MRSA strains than the bacteria typically found in the community," Roberts says. Three samples, from beaches 10 miles apart, were "essentially the same," she says. -WebMD Health News

It is unclear where this hospital-acquired lookalike MRSA on the beaches is coming from, but researchers are working hard to find out.

In the meantime, protect yourself and your children from MRSA at the beach by:

· Brushing all the sand off when you get out of the water. Digging and being buried in the sand seem to raise the risk of MRSA infection.

· Thoroughly cleaning and covering any open cuts or scrapes before playing in the sand.

· Showering after exiting the water.

· Consulting a health care professional immediately if a cut or scrape seems to be infected a few days after a beach visit.

2 Comments

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Michael BennettInjuryBoard Contributor
Posted by Michael Bennett
September 16, 2009 7:31 AM

For at least several years, researchers in Australia and other countries have known about MRSA and VRE being discharged in contaminated hospital waste water and polluting beaches.

Although it is not yet conclusive, it is suspicious that these recent discoveries of MRSA indicate a common source and that they resemble hospital strains. But if past performance is indicative of future results, if contaminated hospital waste water proves to be the source of ocean side MRSA, unless the media focuses on it and the public demands action, public health officials will likely not respond in a meaningful way.

Pat Gardiner
Posted by Pat Gardiner
September 16, 2009 7:31 AM

Am I the only one to find the wording rather uncertain?

"looked more like hospital-acquired MRSA strains than the bacteria typically found in the community,"

As it comes as a "surprise" one would have thought the identification should be more positive.

My best guess is that it is community acquired strains or rather strains originating in livestock farming.

Pollution of waterways leading to beaches from intensive farming is a worldwide problem.

--
Regards
Pat Gardiner
Release the results of testing British pigs for MRSA and C.Diff now!
www.go-self-sufficient.com and http://animal-epidemics.blogspot.com/

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