When I was in medical school,
U.S. hospitals were plagued by only one kind of “superbug” or antibiotic
resistant bacteria. Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus, abbreviated as
MRSA and pronounced “mursa,” was the Enemy and it had been around since the
early 1960s. I remember the yellow precaution signs on the door of rooms
housing patients infected with this organism and the ritual donning of a yellow
gown and surgical gloves before entering those rooms. Staph colonizes the skin
of healthy people; if it enters the body through a break in the skin it can
cause a serious infection, and if the staph is resistant to what was previously
the best drug for treating it, the patient can be in trouble.
Then in the late 1980s, along
came another bad actor, Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococci (VRE). Enterococci
normally inhabit the gastrointestinal tract; sometimes they escape and when
they do, for example through fecal contamination of a wound, they can cause
significant mischief. Enterococcal infections had come under control with the
antibiotic vancomycin—until they developed resistance. Now, MRSA and VRE have
been joined by a new threat: Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE).
According to a study published this month, the rate of detection of this
infection has jumped five-fold in 5 years. And the mortality from these
infections ranges from 48% to 71%. The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta took the extreme measure of classifying CRE as an
urgent threat. Only 2 other organisms currently share this honor.
The newest superbug, like
MRSA and VRE before it, is something that healthy people don’t normally
contract. Its victims are patients in nursing homes and hospitals, especially
people who are connected to a medical device such as a ventilator or a catheter
(whether urinary or intravenous). Debilitated older people are at particularly
high risk. The CDC offers a 4-prong strategy for attacking the problem
(preventing infection in the first place, tracking resistant organisms,
improving the use of today’s antibiotics, and promoting the development of new
antibiotics). I suggest an additional strategy that is rarely discussed: keeping
frail, old people out of the hospital altogether.
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