Topic : 04/01 The Superbug

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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.

Find out what happened on the show.

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April 10, 2008, 2:51 pm PDT

04/01 The Superbug

Everyone needs to be made aware of this virus. I contacted MERCA right before Thanksgiving of 2007. I had it on my nose of all places. I have never had contact with anyone who had this disease and my Dr. has no idea were it might have come from. I fought this for 5 months and hopefully I am done with treatment. I have had 2 PICC lines and went in every morning for treatment for 3 hours and took a portable pump home with me at nght and had 2 more treatments at home. I am very lucky to have great doctors who know what they are doing and how to treat MERCA. People need to understand the shame one has with this disease. People don't understand and act as if you are a monster. I have made new friends along the way and we all help each other though this horrible time. . I also have to say I am lucky to have a husband who was there with me every step of the way, some people don't have the support of loved ones.  I am very greatful for each and every day and now know how quickly it all can come to an end.

 

 
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April 10, 2008, 9:19 pm PDT

My Extremely Micro-Preemie Baby had MRSA

Hi! I really enjoyed the show on the superbug, MRSA. I have dealt with the bug first hand...my baby little girl contracted the bug after a heart surgery at less than two weeks old. Now you may be thinking, oh my, a baby only two weeks old with this horrible bug...well...not only was she less than two weeks old, struggling to survive after a heart surgery to close a valve to her heart that hadn't closed from birth, but she also only weighed 1 pound, 4 ounces.

Though I enjoyed the show thoroughy (as I do ALL Dr. Phil shows!) I hope it didn't go too far with scaring people. After Abby contracted the bug I advocated at the hospital for further safety measures to prevent the bug from further spreading. Having a micro preemie baby, I was already use to the drill of wash, wash, wash. Then after she got MRSA (which I was told was probably contracted during the surgery) my washing stepped up to almost an obsession. I knew my daughter had contracted it by contact with an infected person or object. Now I, as her mother, knew I could now be a potential spreader of this disease, if proper measures where not taken. I even visited with the head of the NICU to help take steps to further prevent the spread of this horrible bug.

Long story short - though my daughter had a very lengthy hosptalization (she did not come home for the first time until she was 14months old, spending her first birthday and Christmas in the hospital) she is now doing wonderful...bright, smart, adorable and a comedian to boot....and has been given the clear of MRSA (with three negative cultures). I still however, am a germophobic...

I always think of it this way...say you stick your hands in a gallon of paint every half hour without washing them...now go about your daily activities with the paint on your hands. At the end of the day, just think of how many objects around you would be covered in paint...and how many others would end up with paint also on their hands if they could not see it...that  paint is the germs/bugs...waiting for their opportunity to jump ahold to another victim.

Again, I thank Dr. Phil for the public awareness...but wish to give some comfort to others who are fighting, or are afraid of this bug that if a teeny tiny fragile infant barely weighing a pound could fight off this bully bug, there is definate hope for others. Thanks.

 
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April 12, 2008, 1:09 am PDT

never safe

Dont think that if you dont have surgery in the hospital that you are safe from MRSA.  I was in the maternity ward of the hospital when I was exposed to MRSA.  I was having trouble breastfeeding and the nurse who helped me had MRSA on her when I got MRSA in my breast.  It was only found after i got a huge lump in my breast that needed to be surgically opened up and cleaned out.  It was a very scary time and I had worries about whether it would ever be gone and most importantly if I had given it to my newborn baby.  I could not get any straight answers from the docters and they all said it was gone, but I still wonder if I dont need to worry about the future.  I feel like i may still be carrying MRSA and may be able to give it to someone else.  It is an unclean, scary feeling and I want my son to be able to have a normal life.  The doctors say it is gone, can I trust them to tell me the truth?  Will I have to be worried about having any more children in that hospital?  Are there any lawsuits going on about this issue?  I never thought that I could have died.  Im very angry that others on the show have dealt with death and constant health problems without being reimbursed for their pains.  Someone should be held responsible for this.  The doctors who dont do the tests until it is too late and the hospitals that let their nurses touch patients without washing their hands or wearing gloves.  I cant understand why that boy had to die, or the young woman has to have lumps under her arm, and why my baby had to go without breast milk because someone came into our rooms with a deadly disease.  Why does it always take doctors months and months to order tests?  This is all so unfair and we are all so powerless against it.  I hope that in knowledge of MRSA, we can learn how not to spread it in the hospitals to all these innocent lives.  AAnd that doctors can stop neglecting  these open sores and sending people home with no help.  My main concern is whether MRSA can really be gone?  And how we can get rid of it?  I was finally given Bactrim for it after many weeks of penicillin.

 
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April 12, 2008, 11:57 am PDT

Monster

I, too, have been living with MRSA for about six years now. I was in an automobile accident where I flipped my truck five times. I landed upside down and was held in by the seat belt, THANK GOD! The EMT's told me had I not been wearing my seat belt, I would have been thrown out on the first flip (end over end) and I would not be here today. The down side is that due to the seat belt holding me upside down,  I suffered an A/C Joint Separation #3. My Orthopedist tried everything under the sun to keep from doing surgery; however, I eventually had to have surgery and contracted MRSA in the operating room. Ten days after the initial surgery, I was back in the operating room, with my doctor trying to flush the "monster "out of my shoulder. He told my mom that short of amputating my arm, he had done all he could do. I was put in isolation for ten days and was admitted to the hospital six more times. Ultimately I was sent home with a PIC line. I am fortunate that mom is a nurse and she was able to administer the drugs as needed; had she not been a nurse, I would have had to pay Home Health $300.00 per day to come out and administer the drugs.

  I have numerous bouts with this "monster" ( that is the only way I know to describe MRSA). My most recent bout came up as a bump on the back of my neck and had a hole about one and a half inches deep. It was extremely infected and it still has not closed completely. My mom was out of state at the time that this last bout happened, so I did not know how bad it really was until she came home. Upon seeing it, she immediately took me to the doctor. Since I have no insurance coverage and cannot work due to the numerous outbreaks, I chose to treat this on an out-patient basis. I am now horrified every time I have to go to the hospital, but I do believe the worse has already happened.

  My doctor said that MRSA has gotten into my bloodstream and every organ of my body, including the muscles and tissues. Now I am just waiting for the day that this MONSTER takes me out.!!!!!!!!!!!!

 
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April 12, 2008, 12:00 pm PDT

Monster

I, too, have been living with MRSA for about six years now. I was in an automobile accident where I flipped my truck five times. I landed upside down and was held in by the seat belt, THANK GOD! The EMT's told me had I not been wearing my seat belt, I would have been thrown out on the first flip (end over end) and I would not be here today. The down side is that due to the seat belt holding me upside down,  I suffered an A/C Joint Separation #3. My Orthopedist tried everything under the sun to keep from doing surgery; however, I eventually had to have surgery and contracted MRSA in the operating room. Ten days after the initial surgery, I was back in the operating room, with my doctor trying to flush the "monster "out of my shoulder. He told my mom that short of amputating my arm, he had done all he could do. I was put in isolation for ten days and was admitted to the hospital six more times. Ultimately I was sent home with a PIC line. I am fortunate that mom is a nurse and she was able to administer the drugs as needed; had she not been a nurse, I would have had to pay Home Health $300.00 per day to come out and administer the drugs.

  I have numerous bouts with this "monster" ( that is the only way I know to describe MRSA). My most recent bout came up as a bump on the back of my neck and had a hole about one and a half inches deep. It was extremely infected and it still has not closed completely. My mom was out of state at the time that this last bout happened, so I did not know how bad it really was until she came home. Upon seeing it, she immediately took me to the doctor. Since I have no insurance coverage and cannot work due to the numerous outbreaks, I chose to treat this on an out-patient basis. I am now horrified every time I have to go to the hospital, but I do believe the worse has already happened.

  My doctor said that MRSA has gotten into my bloodstream and every organ of my body, including the muscles and tissues. Now I am just waiting for the day that this MONSTER takes me out.!!!!!!!!!!!!

 
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April 12, 2008, 11:49 pm PDT

04/01 The Superbug

Quote From: bobbylee653

Good hygeine IS very important, argeed, but even washing your hands every 5 seconds won't stop MRSA from entering the scratch you got on your BACK or LEG from the family cat! True there was a lot more that needed to be covered that wasn't on Dr. Phil's show, BUT it was only a one hour show and that was a LOT more than other celebs  were willing to devote to this  subject! I applaude Dr. Phil for a least trying. Wash your hands, but don't EVER think MRSA is simple!
MRSA isn't simple but preventing it is.
 
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April 13, 2008, 12:14 am PDT

04/01 The Superbug

Quote From: patriciainca

I just wanted you to know I got your reply. I will note the MRSA infection in all my future medical paperwork, and will tell the doctors.

I am also wondering about the ways MRSA is spread. If it is in your nose, would you only be able to spread it if you touch your nose?  So, for example, after I have surgery (to repair a severly degenerated achilles tendon, that will require a tendon transfer & graft-obviosuly not something I want to get infected!!)  would wearing gloves & washing hands be all I need to minimze the chance of being reinfected? Or is it that MRSA could be 'in' the body in such a way that I could end up with another MRSA infection even if we took hand washing & glove wearing precatuions? As in do you have to 'touch your nose & then touch an open sore/wound' to get infected? Or does it just lay dormant in the body until another flare up?

Just trying to understand the risks, given that I have already had an MRSA infection.
Thank you for the info...

Right now, I'm sensing you're concerned about your surgical incision becoming infected.  The chances it's in your blood lying dormant and ready to "attack" your surgical site are pretty small since your previous infection was superficial (in the skin) and most likely community-acquired.

 

 

About your surgical incision:

 

I would suggest only handling your surgical wound after hand washing but then again, I'd suggest that to all patients. 

 

We work with the body from a clean area to a dirty area, meaning we wouldn't change a dressing on a surgical incision (which is considered clean) immediately after wiping our bottoms, privates, noses, etc.(dirty).  Rather, you would change the dressing and then continue to the dirty areas.  I also suggest putting this to practice.

 

Here's a link that may help: http://www.mayoclinic.com/print/mrsa/DS00735/DSECTION=all&METHOD=print

 
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April 17, 2008, 9:46 am PDT

Ongoing Battle with MRSA

I have to say, I don't normally have time to watch Dr Phil but a friend sent me an email that Dr Phil recently recorded a show on MRSA.  You may be blessed and never be infected with this Superbug.  Remember, knowledge is power.  If you, your family member or someone you know mentions STAPH or AN INFECTED SPIDER BITE...please share this info with them.    My husband is part of an Emergency Response Hazardous Material team and has had 4 bouts with staph with the first happening right after haz mat cleanup from Hurricane Rita.  #1 - a small insect type bite on his shoulder that increased in size overnight with extreme pain and hot to the touch. Treatment on the weekend at an urgent care clinic.  #2 - a year later, same but on the back of neck, saw our family physician and a dermatologist. #3 - Nov. 07 on his forearm diagnosed as an infected spider bite and was much more severe so we believed the doctor. Each of these were treated with antibiotics and NEVER was a culture taken! #4 - Feb 08 came back from a job where Hurricane Rita had previously hit. 3 small insect bites under armpits that mulitplied to 9 boils! Called our doctor for a referral and saw another doctor that tried to drain the bigger boils in his office (complete torture)!  Our pharmacist at Target pointed out he needed to be on IV not oral antibiotics (which I believe now he helped save my husband's life!)   Saw a surgeon the next day and was admitted into the hospital.  Surgery and 4 days of IV antibiotics.  On the 4th day, nurses told us it was NOT staph and that he was on the correct antibiotics.  Surgeon looked at his armpits and told us it was NOT MRSA...and said see me in a week!    I stayed on the phone until I found Dr Leonardo Palau MD, an infectious disease doctor in Houston TX that my friend saw when he acquired HA-MRSA. My husband was off work for 3 weeks, on IV at home for 12 days with superdrug called Cubicen and was treated with compassion.  Dr Palau showed us the lab results that were done in the hospital, POSITIVE for MRSA and his body was rejecting the very antibiotic the hospital had him on! His staff drained his wounds and taught me how to pack them.  I was then taught how to administer the IV and I want to point out it never was my dream to be a nurse!   We are now working on building up his immune system and I am a raging germaphoebic!  I've calmed down a bit.  However, WASHING YOUR HANDS constantly with DIAL COMPLETE, using PURELL, cleaning every surface with LYSOL OR BLEACH,  adding LYSOL OR BLEACH to our laundry always done in HOT water and spraying everything with AEROSOL LYSOL.  We now carry LYSOL TO GO and PURELL with us.  But most of all, PRAYING and asking others to keep us in their prayers.   If your family physician suggests STAPH or AN INFECTED SPIDER BITE...get to an INFECTIOUS DISEASE DOCTOR immediately. I wouldn't mess around because each doctor acted like this was normal to have reoccurring staph.  This has forced us to do our own research and be active in all aspects of our own health care.  No longer will I just accept a diagnosis and a prescription...I know ask questions and get online.   Here's the link from Dr Phil and I recommend it highly, it will help you with some prevention tips to protect you and your family.  It will definitely educate you on the Superbug MRSA!   http://drphil.com/shows/show/1048/
 
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April 26, 2008, 12:00 am PDT

MRSA

I cannot believe that more people do not know about this deadly superbug. In January, my cousin, who was 45 died of community acquired MRSA, which I believe is the strain and type that the community should be worried about. She was very active, never sick, getting married for the first time in June. She was either riding her bike or sailing, snowboarding or skiing. At 6'6 she was extremely athletic. She and her soon to be husband were skiing at Steamboat Springs one weekend and skiied hard for 2 days straight. The next night she vomited and had a headache and a fever. She went to the ER. They admitted her to ICU for pneumonia. Her fiancee said goodbye for the night, then received a call at around 5 am saying she had taken a turn for the worst and they needed permission to intubate her for life support. A few hours later, she had no detectable brain function. By performing sputum cultures they narrowed down the time to when she may have contracted the MRSA, which is what they had found on autopsy, it was in her lungs, and had necrotized to her whole right side of her body. The most likely scenarios: 1) She had stubbed her right toe when she was going in the pool the day before she had become sick, this had allowed bacteria to come in to her bloodstream. 2) this is the more likely, since it began in the lungs probably: she had acquired an airborne strain of MRSA, the only place they could think of in that time frame was a ski- in/out area where you can drink hot coffee/cocoa, etc. where there were many people coughing. The scary thing is, the person who was coughing probably had no idea they were even a carrier, and they could be infecting many people. Imagine if that person was on a plane on a long flight. She was gone in less that 2 days. I had wanted to email in about this topic when I saw the show, because there are more cases like this than the public is aware of. MRSA in hospitals is a huge concern, my grandfather died of a staph infection 7 years ago in the hospital. However, there are precautions and I have friends who are docs and nurses and if the insurance companies will provide the funds for better resources to be available to all healthcare professionals, better sterilization equipment and tools are out there. But out in the community, there is no control, and no idea who is carrying this Superbug.
 
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May 2, 2008, 8:33 am PDT

you don't have a clue--I could write a book

After a 29 day hospital stay, 5 1/2 month recouperating time at home, I'm finally back to work.  This is something NOBODY thought would happen, not even the physical therapist.  I am just so happy to be alive as my heart stopped three times.  If the cardiologist didn't stay all night with me, I wouldn't be here today.  The patients were dying with 107 fevers, but mine reached 107.9.  It cooked the inside of my mouth which still bothers me today.  This MRSA aged me about ten years.  I know I'll never be my old self, but by the grace of our LORD, I'm here to spend time with my grandchildren and my devoted husband, whom never left my side.  He cared for me, feeding me and dressing me.  It totally destroys your body.  I even lost 65 pounds.

 
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