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2007-03-10 09:47:56 · 10 answers · asked by postpho60 1 in Health Diseases & Conditions Infectious Diseases

10 answers

Depends on where you got the infection on your body. But I know toilet seats can pass it, so im sure touching something with the bacteria on it can pass it somewhat easily.

2007-03-10 09:50:45 · answer #1 · answered by savannah 2 · 0 0

Well, staph infections are very serious. If you think you might have one, go to the doctor right away. I got one last year. I was rushed to the emergency room for surgery one night during spring break, and was told that I would have dies if I'd waited another day to come in. Staph is a bacteria that is immune to most antibiotics. It is commonly found in hospitals because hospitals are kept so clean. The bacteria has become immune to most of the soaps and cleaning detergents they use. This is why it's found a lot in hospital, I would deffinately know, having nearly lost my life to it. I am actually going to the hospital tomorrow, because I fear that I have another infection in my leg. Not like you really needed to know that, just thought I'd emphasize the fact that I know what I'm talking about.

2007-03-10 14:10:28 · answer #2 · answered by tiggerchic006 2 · 0 0

The word is Staph. Staph bacteria is everywhere at all times. On your skin, in your body, on surfaces...everywhere. It's not due to "dirty tools and catheters". Surgical instruments are either reusable and sterilized after every use or are disposable. All catheters are disposable and are never reused.

Often it is spread by unwashed hands but this is more likely to be due to visitors than staff. Visitors are often careless or ignore precautions. This is not say that staff members aren't guilty of this unsafe practice as well. Staph bacteria are more likely to accumulate in certain sitautions as with indwelling catheters, for example, but caths of all kinds are routinely changed for this reason. Those with impaired immune systems are most vulnerable to infection. And anytime there is skin impairment - a wound either accidental or surgical - there's a risk for opportunistic infection. And Staph is extremely opportunistic.

There are studies ongoing to determine causative factors and how they can best be dealt with to reduce the number of Staph infections that occur every year.

2007-03-10 10:46:58 · answer #3 · answered by TweetyBird 7 · 1 0

hi Brandi, i'm no longer a general practitioner, yet I did protect my former boss who had truly some medical issues and spent truly some time contained in the medical institution. I helped with wound care on an open wound so i'm rather attentive to team infections. in my view, if you're in reliable well being and don't have any open wounds your self, you are able to manage to visit her. truly some human beings have useful operations and then the topic matters they incur are team infections that they get contained in the medical institution of their open wound the position that they had the operation. Hospitals are sesspools of germs (from each and each of the ill those who're there). She likely stuck her team an infection contained in the medical institution. So what i tips is in case you contact something contained in the medical institution (something) do not contact something else until eventually you've washed your fingers. do not placed your handbag on the floor. even as my boss and that i viisted her sister contained in the medical institution after she'd had an intensive mastectomy, my boss became yelling at her sister for putting her handbag on the floor and then later putting her handbag on the mattress to get something out of it. interior some days, after what became in the different case a useful operation, her sister had a team an infection contained in the incision section. team infections are very severe. i wish this wasn't too lengthy of a reaction yet see you later as you have not placed something on the floor contained in the medical institution (carry close your handbag on the aspect of your chair or carry it) and also you've thoroughly washed your fingers before touching absolutely everyone else or your human being eyes, or open wounds, you are able to be effective. the in reality time i have heard of someone getting a team an infection is even as they have an open wound. i imagine your epidermis protects you from it in the different case. wish this enables!

2016-12-01 19:29:41 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Definition

Staphylococcal (staph) infections are communicable diseases caused by certain bacteria and generally characterized by the formation of abscesses. They are the leading cause of primary infections originating in hospitals in the United States.


Description

Classified since the early twentieth century as among the deadliest of all disease-causing organisms, staphylococcal bacteria exist on the skin or inside the nostrils of 20 to 30 percent of healthy people. It is sometimes found in breast tissue, the mouth, and the genital, urinary, and upper respiratory tracts.

Staph bacteria are usually harmless; however, when an injury or a break in the skin enables the organisms to invade the body and overcome the body's natural defenses, consequences can range from minor discomfort to death.


Demographics

Infection is most apt to occur in newborns; children whose immune systems have been undermined by radiation treatments, chemotherapy, or medication; those with surgical incisions or skin disorders; and among people with serious illnesses such as cancer, diabetes, and lung disease. Children are also more at risk for staph infections if they have HIV/AIDS or other diseases that compromise immune function, have a catheter or implanted prosthetics, are hospitalized, have open wounds, or live in close quarters with a large group of others. It is not clear exactly how many staph infections occur each year, but it is the most common infection that begins in the hospital.


Causes and symptoms

Staph bacteria can spread through the air, but infection is almost always the result of direct contact with open sores or body fluids contaminated by these organisms. Staph bacteria often enter the body through inflamed hair follicles or oil glands. Or they penetrate skin damaged by burns, cuts and scrapes, infection, insect bites, or wounds.

Multiplying beneath the skin, bacteria infect and destroy tissue in the area where they entered the body. Staph infection of the blood (staphylococcal bacteremia) develops when bacteria from a local infection infiltrate the lymph glands and bloodstream. These infections, which can usually be traced to contaminated catheters or intravenous devices, cause persistent high fever. They may cause shock. They also can cause death within a short time.


Staphylococcus aureus

Named for the golden color of the bacteria grown under laboratory conditions, Staphylococcus aureus is a hardy organism that can survive in extreme temperatures or other inhospitable circumstances. About 70 to 90 percent of the population carry this type of staph in their nostrils at some time in their lives. Although present on the skin of only 5 to 20 percent of healthy people, as many as 40 percent of individuals carry it elsewhere, such as in the throat, vagina, or rectum, for varying periods of time, from hours to years, without developing symptoms or becoming ill.

S. aureus flourishes in hospitals, where it infects healthcare personnel and infects patients who have had surgery, have open wounds, have acute dermatitis, insulin-dependent diabetes, or dialysis-dependent kidney disease, or who receive frequent allergy-desensitization injections. Staph bacteria can also contaminate bedclothes, catheters, and other objects.

S. aureus causes a variety of infections. Boils and inflammation of the skin surrounding a hair shaft (folliculitis) are the most common. Toxic shock (TSS) and scalded skin syndrome (SSS) are among the most serious.


TOXIC SHOCK Toxic shock syndrome is a life-threatening infection characterized by severe headache, sore throat, fever as high as 105°F (40.5°C), and a sunburn-like rash that spreads from the face to the rest of the body. Symptoms appear suddenly. They also include dehydration and watery diarrhea.

Inadequate blood flow to peripheral parts of the body (shock) and loss of consciousness occur within the first 48 hours. Between the third and seventh day of illness, skin peels from the palms of the hands, soles of the feet, and other parts of the body. Kidney, liver, and muscle damage often occur.

SCALDED SKIN SYNDROME Rare in adults and most common in newborns and other children under the age of five, scalded skin syndrome originates with a localized skin infection. A mild fever and/or an increase in the number of infection-fighting white blood cells may occur.

A bright red rash spreads from the face to other parts of the body and eventually forms scales. Large, soft blisters develop at the site of infection and elsewhere. When they burst, they expose inflamed skin that looks as if it had been burned.

2007-03-10 09:55:01 · answer #5 · answered by Mary O 6 · 2 0

contact with patients who are sick
and they dont use a mask or clean hands
properly after being with a patient this
causes a lot of breakouts in hospitals
and nursing homes

2007-03-10 09:54:46 · answer #6 · answered by caffsans 7 · 0 0

Basically it results from unsanitary conditions. People do not wash their hands well enough, or instruments are not totally disinfected.

2007-03-10 10:26:54 · answer #7 · answered by please remove me from here 4 · 0 0

DIRTY SURGICAL TOOLS USED DURING SURGERY ALSO A SKINNING YOUR ELBOW OR SKINNING YOUR KNEES AND NOT CLEANING THEM OUT CAN CAUSE YOUR CUT TO GET INFECTED

2007-03-10 09:51:36 · answer #8 · answered by Swm 39 4 Younger Swf Forever 4 · 0 0

Nasty people who don't wash their hands after using the restroom.

2007-03-10 09:50:24 · answer #9 · answered by cptmorgan67 3 · 0 0

USING DIRTY TOOLS WEARING A DIRTY CATHETER CAN MAKE YOU VERY ILL THE HOSPITAL NEEDS TO CLEAN EVERYTHING BEFORE USING

2007-03-10 09:52:18 · answer #10 · answered by kitty 6 · 0 0

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