War Wounded Threatened By Superbug
Main Category: Veterans / Ex-ServicemenAlso Included In: MRSA / Drug Resistance
Article Date: 01 Apr 2009 - 3:00 PDT
Soldiers who survive severe injuries on battlefields such as those in Iraq and Afghanistan can be at risk from developing infections of their wounds with multidrug resistant bacteria. The potentially lethal microbes include superbugs such as methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), Acinetobacter baumannii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella species and Escherichia coli.
Dr Clinton K. Murray, from Brooke Army Medical Center, USA, told the Society for General Microbiology Meeting at the International Centre, Harrogate, that at the beginning of the 20th century improved military hygiene and disease control led to a steady decline in the number of wartime deaths attributable to infections classically known as "war pestilence," which included cholera, dysentery, plague, smallpox, typhoid, and typhus fever.
"The development of more effective personal protective equipment, as well as training medics to provide life-saving procedures on the battlefield, has greatly improved survival rates," said Dr Murray. "Positioning surgical and advanced medical care nearer to the point of injury has also enabled casualties to survive near-catastrophic wounds. But even though combat casualties are surviving these severe injuries, they risk developing wound infections. Microbes on the casualty's skin can be introduced into the wound at the time of injury or during subsequent medical care."
Although most of the infections can be treated with standard antibiotics, some of them may be caused by pathogens resistant to many if not all of these drugs. This requires clinicians to prescribe less commonly used antibiotics such as colistin. Modern microbiology and antimicrobial agents can do a lot but hospital infection control even in a war zone is of essential importance.
Source:
Dianne Stilwell
Society for General Microbiology ce.
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MLA
16 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/144440.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/144440.php.
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Superbugs In Military Medical Evacuation System
posted by Marcie Hascall Clark on 2 Apr 2009 at 5:30 amClinton Murray continues to promote the military's spin on the infection problem they have in their medical facilities.
In this little promo piece he states:
"Microbes on the casualty's skin can be introduced into the wound at the time of injury or during subsequent medical care."
Yet more than two years ago he co authored a report that stated:
"Skin carriage of Acinetobacter calcoaceticus‐baumannii complex was not detected among a representative sample of 102 US Army soldiers stationed in Iraq. This observation refutes the hypothesis that preinjury skin carriage serves as the reservoir for the Acinetobacter infections seen in US military combat casualties"
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/518966
These hospital acquired infections were proliferated in the military medical health system. Strains of these superbugs were fast tracked to drug resistance by the lavish use of broad spectrum antibiotics in efforts to save lives and limbs.
It would be more productive to direct the effort the military has put into trying to cover this mess up into cleaning up their act.
Note: Dianne Stilwell is aware of this spin but chose to promote it as well.
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