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Latest Superbug scare - Candida auris

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Libertas:
This is a little disturbing -

Last May, an elderly man was admitted to the Brooklyn branch of Mount Sinai Hospital for abdominal surgery. A blood test revealed that he was infected with a newly discovered germ as deadly as it was mysterious.

Doctors swiftly isolated him in the intensive care unit. The germ, a fungus called Candida auris, preys on people with weakened immune systems, and it is quietly spreading across the globe.

Over the last five years, it has hit a neonatal unit in Venezuela, swept through a hospital in Spain, forced a prestigious British medical center to shut down its intensive care unit, and taken root in India, Pakistan and South Africa .

Recently C. auris reached New York , New Jersey and Illinois, leading the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to add it to a list of germs deemed “urgent threats.”

The man at Mount Sinai died after 90 days in the hospital, but C. auris did not. Tests showed it was everywhere in his room, so invasive that the hospital needed special cleaning equipment and had to rip out some of the ceiling and floor tiles to eradicate it.

“Everything was positive — the walls, the bed, the doors, the curtains, the phones, the sink, the whiteboard, the poles, the pump,” said Dr. Scott Lorin, the hospital’s president. “The mattress, the bed rails, the canister holes, the window shades, the ceiling, everything in the room was positive.”

C. auris is so tenacious, in part, because it is impervious to major antifungal medications, making it a new example of one of the world’s most intractable health threats: the rise of drug-resistant infections.
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In the United States, two million people contract resistant infections annually, and 23,000 die from them, according to the official C.D.C. estimate. That number was based on 2010 figures; more recent estimates from researchers at Washington University School of Medicine put the death toll at 162,000. Worldwide fatalities from resistant infections are estimated at 700,000.
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Yet as the problem grows, it is little understood by the public — in part because the very existence of resistant infections is often cloaked in secrecy.

With bacteria and fungi alike, hospitals and local governments are reluctant to disclose outbreaks for fear of being seen as infection hubs. Even the C.D.C., under its agreement with states, is not allowed to make public the location or name of hospitals involved in outbreaks. State governments have in many cases declined to publicly share information beyond acknowledging that they have had cases.

All the while, the germs are easily spread — carried on hands and equipment inside hospitals; ferried on meat and manure-fertilized vegetables from farms; transported across borders by travelers and on exports and imports; and transferred by patients from nursing home to hospital and back.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/deadly-germs-lost-cures-a-mysterious-infection-spanning-the-globe-in-a-climate-of-secrecy/ar-BBVFPi7

Yeah, fling open those borders, don't screen anybody, don't block travel from known infectious zone...and don't tell people squat about it...yeah, this will ensure a happy result.

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WilliamVA:
Pestilence

Libertas:
Maybe...another seal broke?

With latter-day humans so devoid of sense...makes it easier than ever, eh?

 ::facepalm::

Alphabet Soup:

--- Quote from: Libertas on April 06, 2019, 02:19:01 PM ---Maybe...another seal broke?

With latter-day humans so devoid of sense...makes it easier than ever, eh?

 ::facepalm::

--- End quote ---

What, ya mean like dirt eating Beta O'Rourke?!

Libertas:

--- Quote from: Alphabet Soup on April 06, 2019, 05:06:05 PM ---
--- Quote from: Libertas on April 06, 2019, 02:19:01 PM ---Maybe...another seal broke?

With latter-day humans so devoid of sense...makes it easier than ever, eh?

 ::facepalm::

--- End quote ---

What, ya mean like dirt eating Beta O'Rourke?!

--- End quote ---

Idjits...by their acts we shall know them...

And wish we didn't...

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