MRSA Update
by
Robert Klassen
by Robert Klassen
DIGG THIS
Michael J.
Berens and Ken Armstrong, staff reporters at the Seattle Times,
deserve a Pulitzer Prize for their extensive investigative reports
on MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus). The subject
is not new to me and I have written
about it several times in this space, but their presentation gave
me facts I never knew, like how long MRSA has been around.
The reporters
write that staph infections resistant to penicillin-type antibiotics
emerged in hospitals during the 1970s. One would think that this
information would be vitally important to patient care personnel.
I had been working in critical care since 1963, and I never heard
about it in continuing education lectures or read about it in the
literature. I did not know anything about MRSA until I took a close
look at isolation signs posted on patient’s doors in the mid-1990s,
and then I had to ask what it meant.
As I was reading
the above linked article, I was struck by the time frame. MRSA evidently
appeared at about the same time our old-fashioned isolation procedures
disappeared, as I described here.
Not coincidentally, I think, it was also about the time that business
schooleducated hospital administrators began to be hired by
hospital boards to manage the business. Hospital boards of directors
are seldom, if ever, medical professionals themselves, so it was
a case of the blind leading the blind, otherwise known as a bureaucracy.
In my experience, they were far more concerned with hospital cosmetics
than with the messy details of patient care.
The
reporters also describe the concerted efforts of hospitals to hide
or cover up the frequency of infection and the mortality of infection.
Often it was one lone crusader against a legion of lobbyists, and
congress critters voted reform proposals down. While I’m sure hospitals
don’t want the public to be able to judge them on the basis of facts,
I think the real culprit nationwide is the CDC.
This agency has effectively stonewalled any effort to establish
infection control procedures in hospitals for decades. Why?
I
don’t know, but I must wonder whose hand is in whose pocket. The
hand with the biggest stake in this game is big pharma and to them
being sick unto death means money. The CDC covers itself by focusing
attention on non-existent problems. Meanwhile, we have an epidemic
that’s becoming worse by the day. MRSA can only be treated with
high-powered antibiotics, like Vancomycin. So we have VRSA
waiting for us in hospitals. We also have VRE and C. Diff. and TB.
These highly communicable bacterial infections can be stopped, or
nearly stopped, by rigorous infection control procedures.
I urge you
to read the entire series by Berens and Armstrong. It’s fine work.
November
24, 2008
Robert
Klassen [send him mail]
retired from a forty-year career in critical-care respiratory therapy.
He is the author of five books, including Atlantis:
A Novel about Economic Government,
and Economic
Government, which describe a solution
to the problem of political government. Here's
his web site.
Copyright
© 2008 Robert Klassen
Robert
Klassen Archives
|