Visitors to a MRSA patient be infected if precautions are not taken, and a visitor with a cut in their skin is especially susceptible to contracting the infection.
A patient with dermatologic MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) should be placed on contact precautions. This includes using gloves and gowns when interacting with the patient, as MRSA can be transmitted through direct contact with infected skin or contaminated surfaces. Additionally, the patient's room should be private or cohort with other MRSA-positive patients to minimize the risk of spread. Good hand hygiene is essential for all healthcare providers and visitors.
The designation hospital or community MRSA simply means where the person was infected. Basically, a person is infected either a) in the hospital or b) anywhere else but the hospital.
Everyone is susceptible.
cut out the infected tissue if it is mrsa
It started by pooping
A patient with methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) may have to be quarantined, and visitors, if permitted, may have to "gown up" and be careful visiting. The most common vehicle for transmission is touch (though it is usually a healthcare worker's). A link is provided to the Wikipedia article to get you up to speed, or at least get you started on the learning curve. Good luck.
yes.
MRSA is such a hazard because of its resistance to antibiotics. The use of antibiotics in a hospital setting is so pervasive that the bacteria which can survive in that type of environment are resistant to the most common antibiotic medications. Once a patient becomes infected with MRSA, it is very difficult to treat, usually requiring lab studies and lengthy expensive antibiotic therapy or even removal of the infected tissue. The bacteria is almost impossible to eliminate completely from a clinical environment.
"MRSA not isolated" typically indicates that methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus was not detected in the patient's sample. However, this does not definitively mean the patient does not have MRSA; it may suggest that the bacteria were not present in the tested sample or that the infection is caused by a different organism. Further clinical evaluation and testing may be needed for a conclusive diagnosis.
it can be treated with high doses of antibiotics. it can be prevented by not touching the infected person
Source isolation is stoping staff receiving an infection from a infected patient and protective isolation is to stop the patient receiving an infection from pathogens brought from outside the hospital via visitors etc...
Most MRSA infections are skin infections. One major problem with MRSA is that occasionally the skin infection can spread to almost any other organ in the body. When this happens, more severe symptoms develop ranging from illness to death. People with pneumonia (lung infection) due to MRSA can transmit MRSA by airborne droplets so obviously MRSA can be present in their throats and would show up in a throat culture. It is not necessarily the case that it would ALWAYS or even USUALLY show up in a throat culture of someone infected with MRSA. The infection would have to either have spread there from somewhere else, or picked up directly in the throat by contact with something contaminated with MRSA - like aerosol droplets from the cough of an infected person or having an infected body part stuck in their mouth or throat.