BUGS TO SUPER BUGS Emerging Challenges in Health Care

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BUGS TO SUPER BUGS

Emerging Challenges in Health Care


Dr.T.V.Rao MD
Dr.T.V.Rao MD The last true revolution in infection control occurred in 1867 when British surgeon
Joseph Lister began using carbolic acid as an antiseptic, significantly reducing mortality rates from
infection by 30 percent within a decade. There is now a genuine threat of humanity returning to an
era where mortality due to common infections is rife. Common types of drug-resistant bacteria
include MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus), VRSA (vancomycin-resistant S. aureus),
ESBL (extended spectrum beta-lactamase), VRE (vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus) and MRAB
(multidrug-resistant A. baumannii). While mostly hospital acquired infections, some are transmitted
in the community. In the simplest cases, drug-resistant organisms may have acquired resistance to
first-line antibiotics, thereby necessitating the use of second-line agents. Now many are aware that
our Antibiotic pipe line has become narrow and little is flowing out, as few firms are interested to
develop new Antibiotics as they lose efficacy due to irrational use of Antibiotics. One patient out of
every 20 admitted to hospital contracts a nosocomial infection, (an infection the patient did not
have when they entered the facility), and with 1.8 million people per year acquiring an infection
during their hospital stays (USA). More than 99,000 Americans die annually thats 270 deaths
every day. The elderly and immunocompromised patients are particularly at risk. If this was the
incidence imagine how many are dying in a country like India, it is not death of a person many
resistant strains are spread in the Hospital environment keeping very one guessing who will be
infected and die with the consequences. While the threats have grown more sophisticated, the
methods of controlling and preventing these life-threatening infections have not grown to the
emerging challenges.
Current HAI prevention practices include:

Isolating infected patients.


Requiring staff to wash their hands after each patient examination.
Wearing protective gowns, masks, gloves and other equipment.
Cleaning rooms with harsh chemicals such as hydrogen peroxide.

There is now a genuine threat of humanity returning to an era where mortality due to common
infections is rife,"
While microbes typically developed resistance to drugs in hospitals and health care facilities, a
concerning trend was the increased number of people acquiring antibiotic-resistant infections in
their communities. The Alberta patient who was diagnosed in the summer of 2010 with the infection
of an NDM-1 strain super bug from an Indian hospital has attracted much media attention and alarm
in the medical community. Only two NDM-1 cases have been reported in Canada and a handful of
cases have been reported worldwide, but experts fear that this strain of bacteria can threaten
patients in hospitals globally. Many organisms, known as super bugs, were now resistant to multiple

drugs. Drug-resistant microbes also entered the country with travelers, and no single country can be
blamed for the events as it is a Global concern need health care efforts to reduce the incidence
The most common life threating infection types are respiratory tract infections such as pneumonia
and infections of the bloodstream. These are often caused by Klebsiella pneumoniae and E.coli
bacteria, both of which have shown an ability to develop resistance to some of the most powerful
antibiotics. Among many reported health care-associated infections, surgical site infections and
urinary tract infections are also common. Many of the infections are also found to be drug-resistant
"super bugs", as per our observation, We have proposed for analysing the patients who are staying
in the hospitals for various reasons for more than 2 weeks, and on Antibiotics, as they are important
group of patients who are likely to be put on several antibiotics, and most likely harbour the drug
resistant bacteria, which need more evaluations and health care awareness to reduce to spread to
other patients, Regardless of MRSA or NDM-1, the overuse or misuse of antibiotics contributes to
the formation of these super bugs. When antibiotics are used for things other than bacterial
infections, like flu, or not taken as the doctor prescribed (e.g., stopping taking the antibiotics earlier
than the intended full course of treatment), they will become less effective for future bacterial
infections and possibly acquire resistance genes. As more bacteria become resistant to antibiotics,
the risk of complications and death is increased. Doctors will have to resort to less commonly used
antibiotics, many of which are more expensive and are associated with severe side effects, without
necessarily being able to treat the infection. Anybody with wisdom will perceive control of Infection
continues to be priority in not only patients but hospital establishments. Never forget the survival of
Hospitals is at risk with emerging drug resistant SUPER BUGS in many Health care establishments.

SUPER BUGS ARE TRUE CREATURES AND NOT FICTION THEY TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR
LAPSES IN HEALTH CARE.
Dr.T.V.Rao. MD Professor of Microbiology, Freelance writer

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