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Thread: 7 Infected, More Than 100 Exposed To Potentially Fatal 'Superbug'

  1. #21
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    exotix's Avatar Senior Member
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    Today


    How Those UCLA Endoscopes Got Dirty

    http://www.nbcnews.com/health/health...-dirty-n309146


    No Scrubs

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a warning Thursday about a certain type of endoscope, saying the devices, used to look inside the body, are especially hard to clean.

    And that's bad news for a device that can be re-used, and cleaned, several times each day.

    It's the type of endoscope linked to an outbreak of drug-resistant bacteria that's killed at least two patients and infected five more at the UCLA hospital.

    The university has warned about 180 people that they may have had the same contaminated scope used on them.

    They're used in diagnosing and treating a range of woes, from gallstones to cancer, and have a lot of moving parts.

    "If this can happen at UCLA this can happen everywhere," says infection control expert Marc-Oliver Wright.


    Close-up view of an ERCP endoscope tip.



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    Common's Avatar Senior Member
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    This is the newest thing to try to fight superbugs and infected hospitals.

    Hospitals Combat Superbugs Using Robots to Keep Clean

    http://www.vnews.com/news/business/5940934-95/hospitals-combat-superbugs-using-robots-to-keep-clean
    LETS GO BRANDON
    F Joe Biden

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    Exclamation

    Granny says, "Dat's right - it's dat end time plague - we all gonna die...

    Superbug infections found in China
    Sun, Jan 29, 2017 - LAST RESORT: About 1 percent of a study of 17,000 samples from people infected with common bacteria were found to be resistant to colistin, the last option in antibiotics
    New research suggests a worrying number of people in China may be infected with bacteria resistant to an antibiotic used as a last resort. Researchers examined more than 17,000 samples from patients with infections of common bacteria found in the gut, in two hospitals in China’s Zhejiang and Guangdong provinces, over eight years. About 1 percent of those samples were resistant to colistin, often considered the last option in antibiotics. The study, published on Friday in The Lancet journal, is one of the first to document the extent of drug-resistant infections in more than one Chinese province. For decades, China has used colistin in its agriculture industry to speed animals’ growth, but the drug was not used in people.

    Scientists say the latest work is further evidence that overuse in animals can spread to people. Chinese officials earlier this year approved colistin for use in hospitals, raising fears that it could worsen the resistance problem. “It will be very important to ration its use so that it’s only used when absolutely nothing else will work,” said Mark Enright, a professor of medical microbiology at Manchester Metropolitan University, who was not part of the research. Health officials have long worried that colistin-resistant bacteria may spread more widely, setting the stage for superbug infections that would theoretically be impervious to medications. Only a small number of such cases worldwide have been detected, including in the US.


    A colorized scanning electron micrograph image made available by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows the O157:H7 strain of E coli bacteria

    Rising concerns over drug-resistant germs have prompted the UN to encourage countries to cut back on antibiotic use and develop new medicines. People infected with these resistant strains can usually be treated with current antibiotics, but doctors said that as these bacteria — which are already untreatable with last-resort drugs — acquire resistance to current drugs, the infections may become impossible to treat. Experts also noted a surprise: the apparent ease with which the resistant gene spread between bacteria, including different species of bugs. “It now looks like there’s potential for the resistance gene to move around and spread between different species of bacteria,” said Nigel Brown, a spokesman for Britain’s Microbiology Society, adding that it could lead to a jump in infections.

    In a separate study also published in The Lancet, another group of Chinese researchers analyzed samples from patients with blood infections at 28 hospitals. About 1 percent had the colistin-resistant gene — a much higher figure than would be expected in developed countries. Colistin’s use in hospitals should be restricted to avoid problems, said Yu Yunsong, one of the study’s authors. “This is a warning shot about the possible scenario where we don’t have very much left in the armory to treat [bacterial] infections,” Brown said. “I don’t think we are very close to that happening, but it is a remote possibility if we aren’t careful about how we use our antibiotics.”

    http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/worl.../29/2003664008

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    Maybe if'n all them there money gubbin' rural republicans would stop feedin their cattle, hogs, and chickens our life saving antibiotics just to make a quick buck we wouldn't all be about to die.
    People who think a movie about plastic dolls is trying to turn their kids gay or trans are now officially known as

    Barbie Q’s

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    Drug Companies Told to Do More to Tackle 'Superbug' Crisis...

    Drug Companies Told to Do More to Tackle 'Superbug' Crisis
    January 23, 2018 — Drugmakers' response to the threat posed by "superbugs" remains patchy even after years of warnings, according to the first analysis of individual companies' efforts to tackle the antibiotic resistance crisis.
    The rise of drug-resistant bacteria is a growing threat to modern medicine with the emergence of infections resistant to even last-resort antibiotics — a situation made worse in recent years by overuse of antibiotics and cutbacks in drug research. New analysis by the nonprofit Access to Medicine Foundation (AMF), published Tuesday, found that GlaxoSmithKline and Johnson & Johnson were doing more than most among large research-based pharmaceutical companies to tackle the problem, while Mylan led the way among generic drugmakers and Entasis was top among biotechs.


    Overall, GSK led the field with 55 antimicrobial pipeline projects, including 13 vaccines. But action taken by such companies is only the start of what could be done to address the problem, which former Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O'Neill in 2014 estimated could cause 10 million deaths a year worldwide by 2050. "The whole of modern medicine depends on being able to control and treat infections," said Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust charity. "Perhaps the most exciting area of medicine at the moment, immunotherapies for cancer, is impossible unless you can control infection."


    'Definitely more' should be done


    While more experimental antibiotics are now moving through development than a few years ago, the number is still down from what it was during the 1980s and 1990s. And a lot more work needs to be done to ensure appropriate use of medicines — both new ones and the thousands of metric tons of older pills churned out each year by generic companies. "There's definitely more that all companies can do," said Jayasree Iyer, executive director of AMF, which published the analysis at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland. "We need to strengthen the research and development pipeline, and when new products reach the market, we need to ensure that they are used in a conservative way so that misuse and overuse is limited." There are now 28 experimental antibiotics in late-stage development against critical pathogens, but only two of these are supported by plans to ensure they can be both made accessible and used wisely if they reach the market.



    A microbiologist works with tubes of bacteria samples at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta



    The AMF said four companies — GSK, Shionogi, Pfizer and Novartis — had taken steps to separate sales representatives' bonuses from the volume of antibiotics sold, but that much more needed to be done across the industry to counter overuse. Another under-recognized problem is the pollution caused by mass production of antibiotics, due to lax oversight of wastewater runoff. In India's Hyderabad region, for example, the presence of hundreds of drug factories and inadequate water treatment has left lakes and rivers laced with antibiotics, making the area a giant petri dish for anti-microbial resistance. The AMF urged multinational drugmakers to do more to ensure that their suppliers of bulk antibiotic ingredients were complying with rigorous wastewater standards.


    https://www.voanews.com/a/drug-compa...s/4220961.html

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    Quote Originally Posted by exotix View Post
    Today


    How Those UCLA Endoscopes Got Dirty

    http://www.nbcnews.com/health/health...-dirty-n309146


    No Scrubs

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a warning Thursday about a certain type of endoscope, saying the devices, used to look inside the body, are especially hard to clean.

    And that's bad news for a device that can be re-used, and cleaned, several times each day.

    It's the type of endoscope linked to an outbreak of drug-resistant bacteria that's killed at least two patients and infected five more at the UCLA hospital.

    The university has warned about 180 people that they may have had the same contaminated scope used on them.

    They're used in diagnosing and treating a range of woes, from gallstones to cancer, and have a lot of moving parts.

    "If this can happen at UCLA this can happen everywhere," says infection control expert Marc-Oliver Wright.


    Close-up view of an ERCP endoscope tip.


    Colonoscopy can have the same problem. I know a man that almost died from an infection he got during his when the clinic hadn't properly cleaned the device they used on him.

  8. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by Kacper View Post
    Colonoscopy can have the same problem. I know a man that almost died from an infection he got during his when the clinic hadn't properly cleaned the device they used on him.
    That is crappy.
    ΜOΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ


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    Kacper (01-24-2018)

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