Topic : 04/01 The Superbug

Number of Replies: 546
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Created on : Friday, February 29, 2008, 01:21:15 pm
Author : DrPhilBoard1
Could a grave danger be lurking in your home? If you believe the headlines, you know that catching the Superbug can have deadly consequences, but should you be concerned? How can you spot the danger, and what can you do to stay safe? Dr. Phil gets to the bottom of these questions and others. Melissa's son, Mark, was just 13 when he went to the hospital and wound up with MRSA, also known as the Superbug. Learn about Melissa’s tragic loss and why she thinks her son’s death could have been prevented. Then, 19-year-old Stephanie has been battling the Superbug for almost a year. Get a firsthand account of her experience with the disease, and find out what advice her doctor gave her that has Dr. Phil shocked and concerned. Even doctors aren’t immune to the Superbug. Dr. Drew O’Neal had an accident while on vacation, and what happened next changed his life forever. He shares his valuable insights as both doctor and patient. Plus, two years ago, Glen was your average sophomore playing on his high school football team -- until he contracted the Superbug right from the team’s locker room. Find out what important lessons he learned that could help protect you and your children from the disease. And renowned pediatrician Dr. Jim Sears weighs in with the latest information and shows off products to keep on hand that could save your life. Join the discussion.

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chillin'
April 2, 2008, 6:32 pm PDT

Organic just isn't practical.........

Quote From: ramair

What the workers, often from countries good hygiene isn't practiced, do while picking produce or processing chickens, make a good case against illegal immigration. Buying organic products from local farms could reduce germs. Other than those from idiots sneezing on them in the produce aisle. That's just trashy.
I personally like the idea of organic fruits and vegetables but it isn't practical to think that the farmers could feed the world growing their produce that way. The crops have to be mass produced or the world would go hungry. And field workers? Well, I'm certainly not crazy about the idea of that either but there is a practical side to it also. First I want to say that they come over here and get free medical, use other family members SSN's and a bunch of other stuff like that which takes a toll on the USA's finances but think about it. Who will work the fields if they don't? That is awful, back breaking, hot work. It is in fact the lowest form of employment in this country. I happen to know quite a bit about this subject because my husband is the #1 Supervisor for a produce company. He has worked in produce management all of his life and he is 59 years old. We've been married for over 20 years. He supervises the shipping, he walks the fields, he does just about everything but sell the stuff and pick it of course. I also worked with someone who was born in Mexico and she told me that she picked produce for awhile and it is so hard that she would never do that again.  I don't understand why the illegal aliens don't just get a green card to work here legally. That baffles me. And about the trashy sneezing, yes that's pretty gross but I think the most important thing everyone can do to stop so many of the awful germs being passed such as e-coli is to wash their hands after using the bathroom. Here we are in the year 2008 and after all of the programs on TV like 60 minutes, etc, and the nightly news reporting this, how come there are so many people that are still not getting it?!!!!!! I don't get it!!!!! That is just so gross and such a simple thing to do. Back when I worked I would see women that I worked with use the bathroom, come out of the stall, groom their hair and prance right out the door. Lipstick yes, hands no. Why is this so hard to do?
 
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worried
April 2, 2008, 6:36 pm PDT

I LIVE WITH MRSA

 I HAVE DEALT WITH MRSA FOR 4 YEARS NOW.  I KNOW I HAVE A NEW SORE OF IT RIGHT NOW. A FEW YEARS AGO, A FRIENDS CHILD HAD A SMALL INFECTION OF MRSA AND NOW I AM DOOMED. I HAVE HAD OVER 10 EPISODES WITH MRSA.  I WENT TO  MY DR. SHORTLY AFTER I WAS DIAGNIOSED WITH MRSA.  THE NEXT THING I KNEW I WAS OVER IN THE SURGEONS OFFICE AND HE TOLD ME I HAD 1 HOUR TO GET OVER TO THE SURGERY ROOM. I WAS SCARED YES AND HAVE BEEN EVER SINCE. IT WAS AN OUTPAITENT SURGERY BUT PRETTY MAJOR. THEY WOULD NOT LET ME LEAVE THE HOSPITAL WITH OUT A HOME CARE SERVICE TO COME HELP ME OUT.  MY HUSBAND WHO ALWAYS TAKES GOOD CARE OF ME, LEFT THE NEXT MORNING THINKING THE NURSE WOULD BE THERE AT 8:00 AM.  WELL SHE NEVER SHOWED UP, SO MY HUBBY  CAME HOME TO TAKE MEBACK TO THE SURGEONS OFFICE SO THEY COULD CLEAN IT OUT.  WELL COME TO FIND OUT THAT WHAT THEY TOOK ME INTO SURGERY FOR WAS TO REMOVE A 4 INCH DEEP 4 INNCH WIDE AND A 4 INCH LONG OF MRSA OUT OF MY SHOULDER!!  TRHE CDC SAID THEY NEVER EVER SEEN ONE THAT BIG OR AS ROCK HARD AS MINE!!  I DIDN'T REALIZE, HOW SICK I WAS AT THE TIME. UNTIL IT HEALED.

 MY DOCTOR TOLD ME IF I WENT ONE MORE DAY WITHOUT REMOVING THAT STAFF I WOULD HAVE DIED.  THEN THEY SENT ME TO A DEASE SPECAILIST, AND HE JUST TOLD ME THAT I WOULD HAVE TO LIVE WITH THIS THE REST OF MY LIFE AND I WILL EVENTUALY DIE FROM THIS.  SO I GO ON DAY TO DAY KNOWING I WILL EVENTUALLY DIE FROM MRSA. LET PEOPLE KNOW ITS NOT FUN. AND NOT JUST IN OUR TEENAGERS. MY 2 KIDS KNOW EVERYTIME I GET AN OUTBREAK AND IT SCARES THEM

 MY 10 YR. OLD HAD TO TAKE MEDS. BECUASE OF THE "OUT BREAK" OF ME.  ITS NOT JUST THE PERSON INFECTED ITS THE WHOLE FAMILY.   SO PLEASE PASS THIS ON ..

           GFULLAGAR

 
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worried
April 2, 2008, 6:40 pm PDT

MRSA

My 26 year old daughter recently had a spot come up on her stomach that she thought was a spider bite; she went to urgent care and was put on penicillin for 10 days.  After listening to your show I now wonder if it is MRSA.  I am terrified for her. She thinks I am overreacting.  What should I do to help her understand?
 
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ecstatic
April 2, 2008, 6:41 pm PDT

How did you do that?

Quote From: poppyseed454

  USE BLEACH

THAT IS BETTER THAN ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL........

  AND USE IT EVERY DAY.

BLEACH BLEACH BLEACH

 

 

HAVE A GOOD DAY

                                                                         Cat 2  Kitty 6

First of all I agree with the bleach idea. I think that will be a more efficient cleanser and anti-bacterial. What I want to know is how you put the kitty cat in your quote? Let me know please. Jewels
 
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chillin'
April 2, 2008, 6:54 pm PDT

The Salesman are another story!

Quote From: brewman2

There are been several shows regarding health issues.... MRSA now being the second. Pharmaceutical companies are working on drugs to treat MRSA however he doesn't say so....yet he has a Doctor on who hawks Lysol! Dr Phil, please be more responsible and give all the information!!! All Pharmaceutical companies are not bad...some really do care about what they do. I don't know of one person who works for one who thinks "I wonder how much money this could make for the company". What they think is "How many people can be helped by the medication that I'm helping to develop."
While I applaud the pharmaceutical companies who are working to make this a better world in which to live the salesmen are a whole different story. They certainly think about 'how much money will this drug make for me?" and how many cruises they will get out of it and kickbacks, etc. They may look respectable but they aren't, at least most of them anyway. I do think that the pharm companies and the government should work together to produce enough anti-viral medication for the next pandemic that is known to be on it's way. It's horrible that no one wants to step up to the plate and take responsibility for this.
 
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worried
April 2, 2008, 7:11 pm PDT

Help!!

My brother is in Iraq, first of all, I am very proud of him for doing what he is doing.  He was diagnosed with MRSA right after he deployed about a year ago. What i really need to know is where we can get one of the lights so that we can send it to him.  he has taken every anti-biotic there is and now they are packing his boils after that have lanced them with yards and yards of gauze.  he will be home next month and i am wanting to find anything i can to help him and make his leave as comfortable and as pleasant as possible.  is there anything that i can buy or use. can anyone help me out please.
 
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blank
April 2, 2008, 7:11 pm PDT

mrsa

my daughters both have had what they said was bad staff infection youngest they keep  in hosipal with iv then done surgey  put tube in mouth to drain the fluid my oldest 17 yr old has had it about three times now going to doc and i'm going to make them tell me if its this i think there hiding the truth from us it happen after they both went to out local  out patients doctor  took youngest for another reasn 2 days later was in hosipal for staff infection  well this my story 
 
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chillin'
April 2, 2008, 7:37 pm PDT

Good point

Quote From: oregonboysmom

Oh, yea I forgot to sayanother place we see a lot is in the pubic area..........the ones that have been shaved and waxed. Anytime you interrupt the integrity of the skin you are inviting into your body what ever bacteria is in the neighborhood.

 

foam on!

People tend to forget that there is an actual reason for the way our bodies are made. Let's not forget about nose hair too. It's fine to keep it trimmed so it's not hanging down your face but don't go too far, it's your first line of defense. And what you mentioned above, the Brazilian craze, I believe in keeping trimmed but there is an actual purpose for your natural state, it is in fact another barrier against the germs that are hoping to invade in anyway they can. I read magazine polls where young men are asked about the Brazilian compared to a woman's normal body. It's hard to figure out the acceptable terms to use while I'm writing this, I'm not embarrassed but I don't want to be kicked off of the sight either. Anyway, the men who are asked about this think it is gross for a woman to have ANY "thing" down there. They have watched too many porn movies and seen too many young girls who are into this to realize that there is nothing wrong with a woman being natural. I find this sad and a little sick. A grown woman is supposed to be that way, otherwise we resemble little girls who have yet to go through puberty. A grown woman is beautiful and todays standards of beauty are getting so far away from normal.  Men expect women to have that large flat space between their breast where normal cleavage should be. I'm glad I'm not 20 anymore!
 
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chillin'
April 2, 2008, 7:46 pm PDT

Patients demand them!

Quote From: oregonboysmom

After this show I will be even more vigilant than I am with my handwashing/"foaming". I have a good knowledge of MRSA but hearing about the child that died made me cry.

 

In the ER I see patients EVERY day that come in with "spider bites" that are infected. Many of these people are touching them while describing their problem. I ask them if they have been "messing with" the wounds and most say yes. Many have been trying to incise/drain at home with needles and who know what. So their hands with the bacteria are who knows where in the community. I am frequently told the whole family has it and they don't know why...........duh! These same people are coming in and visiting people in the hospital.

 

Hospital acquired MRSA is rampant as you all know now. At our hospital anyone that has it has their chart "tagged". Next time they are admitted they go into isolation until they have three (I think) clear swabs from their nose, axilla and groin. It is hard on the families, especially to have to gown up to visit their loved ones, especially the elderly.

 

We have foam containers outside all of the rooms in our ER. When a patient comes into me with  an abscess the first thing I do is give them some foam for their hands and some for me (a little foaming party) before I put my hands or equipment on them. They are sitting in the waiting room, their infected kids running around touching everything; you get the picture.

 

A lot of the patients we see with Community Acquired MRSA are the uninsured; they of course can't see a primary doctor and are usually pretty bad when they come to us because of the cost. So they have been out spreading it for quite a while., living in cramped quarters, many are hygiene challenged. I have said for 30 years that there should be "hygiene stamps" (like food stamps) That is one of the last thing people with little money can purchase.

 

 

 

Here is a question for you..................in studies of handwashing in the hospitals who is the worst about washing their hands between patients and procedures?  Surprise, surprise it is the Physicians. They go from patient to patient, carrying charts, touching the patients.

 

If you are in the hospital ask your nurse or Dr. ......did you foam or wash your hands before coming in to see me? Don't be embarrassed...just do it. Your life may depend on it. I might even refuse anyone's touch if they were not wearing gloves!!

 

All that school cleaning is impressive but it only lasts until the next person comes by and leaves more bacteria on the clean area. I guess we need time released cleaning agents.

 

I must say I was disappointed to see Dr. Sears palpating that child's wound with an ungloved hand-yuk. I am guessing (hoping) it was healed but it was still creepy to see.

 

We human beings have done this to ourselves by our demands for antibiotics for every sniffle and not finishing the ones prescribed.

 

Foam out people!

 

 

Every time someone gets a cold or the flu they see a doctor and expect antibiotics. Don't we all know by now that antibiotics do not cure virus's? But if the doctor refuses the patient thinks the doctor isn't doing anything for them. Instead of drugs they need education about the difference's between bacteria and a virus. Yes, we did do this to ourselves, not me exactly because I have known this for years and only take antibiotics when truly needed, so we have only ourselves to blame. Wash hands!!!!!!!!!!! with soap!!!!!!!!!!!
 
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quiet
April 2, 2008, 8:13 pm PDT

My 2 week old had MRSA

My 2 week old son had MRSA. I had heard a lot about it on the news because there had been many out breaks at local schools around my area, but I never thought I would have to worry about my newborn. After having done research about MRSA in newborns, it turns out this is more common in male newborns who have been circumcised because of having an open wound. This was  a shock to me!

I think this should be discussed with parents before their child gets circumcised, only because I could have recognized it earlier. At first I just thought maybe it was a diaper rash or maybe his diapers were rubbing him and causing little blisters. Even my sons pediatrician thought it was probably nothing. Needless to say a week later the doctor calls to tell me my son has MRSA and luckily we caught it early enough that we were able to just treat it with a topical solution and he was able to get rid of it. It was quite a scary time waiting to see if it would go away on its own or wondering if we would have to put him on stronger antibiotics (which of course on a baby so young could have terrible side effects).

I am a big advocate on doctors warning new moms about this danger and at least telling them what to look for in case they get it because the earlier the detection the better.

 
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