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8 answers

Is your child in the hospital? I will pray he/she gets well soon. I work in the health care field and many people have it where I go.

You can prevent spreading staph or MRSA skin infections to others by following these steps:

Cover your wound. Keep wounds that are draining or have pus covered with clean, dry bandages. Follow your healthcare provider’s instructions on proper care of the wound. Pus from infected wounds can contain staph and MRSA, so keeping the infection covered will help prevent the spread to others. Bandages or tape can be discarded with the regular trash.
Clean your hands. You, your family, and others in close contact should wash their hands frequently with soap and warm water or use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer, especially after changing the bandage or touching the infected wound.
Do not share personal items. Avoid sharing personal items such as towels, washcloths, razors, clothing, or uniforms that may have had contact with the infected wound or bandage. Wash sheets, towels, and clothes that become soiled with water and laundry detergent. Drying clothes in a hot dryer, rather than air-drying, also helps kill bacteria in clothes.
Talk to your doctor. Tell any healthcare providers who treat you that you have or had a staph or MRSA skin infection.

2007-12-31 18:02:51 · answer #1 · answered by Stephanie F 7 · 0 0

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2016-11-27 02:45:26 · answer #2 · answered by binford 4 · 0 0

There is no virus called mrrsa. There is a bacterium called MRSA, short for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, and there's no reason to panic or go overboard unless there's somebody in your house with serious immune deficiencies. Staph is the germ that's always been associated with common skin infections like boils, though the strains resistant to beta-lactam antibiotics are a pretty new wrinkle. Normal housecleaning with simple agents is more than adequate. As a matter of fact, using things that "kill germs on contact," as the TV ads often say, may only increase the incidence of hard-to-treat germs. And the people closing down schools and silly stuff like that are irrationally paranoid. The strains of MRSA picked up in hospitals (HA-MRSA) are sometimes indeed tough. The much more common community-acquired strains (CA-MRSA) can't be treated with cephalexin, as we normally did for thirty years, but many of those infections clear without any antibiotics at all, and in most communities, the strains are sensitive to even older and less expensive antibiotics like sulfamethoxasole-trimethoprim.

2007-12-31 18:18:14 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Clorox will kill staff. Where is the MRSA located? Wound? Lung? Urine?

2007-12-31 18:04:12 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

my niece has that. You can only clean so much, but you cant eliminate all the germs. I would say, mainly focus on keeping her bed sheets, etc changed, and keep the bath tub really clean. Never let her sit in a soiled diaper. If she gets hurt or any open cuts or soars, keep them clean and covered.

Mainly the basic hygenic things that you would normally do when caring for any child

2007-12-31 18:03:06 · answer #5 · answered by Real Talk 4 · 0 0

Oh god. I once took care of an older gentleman with this. Keep germ lotion everywhere, use bleach and water to sanitize, they have tissues with stuff in it now that kills 99% of germs, keep any open wounds covered, basically practice good sanitation. I hope your child is staying home until he's better, I wouldn't recommend letting him around other people until it clears up. Even a simple sneeze from him can infect someone since the spores are found in the nose, be very careful, it's a tricky and nasty bacteria.

2007-12-31 18:02:35 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

MRSA or Golden Staph is carried by over 50% of the population. nearly 90% of the medical field is carriers of MRSA. unfortunately all the cleaning in the world will not prevent you from this form of infection. Good hand washing between patients by health care providers is the best was to minimise transmition.

2007-12-31 18:01:00 · answer #7 · answered by dawson_brister 3 · 0 0

shoot. basically you want to sanitize everything. particularly and clothing the child has worn, sheets or blankets and towels they have used, etc. keep them in as sterile a place as you can and keep the infection covered and clean. that stuff will spread like mad if you don't watch it.

2007-12-31 18:00:04 · answer #8 · answered by hprebel311 3 · 0 0