CommunityAssociated MRSA: Community Interventions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 45
About This Presentation
Title:

CommunityAssociated MRSA: Community Interventions

Description:

Pediatric MRSA in Los Angeles County. Reportable disease ... Use incision and drainage. If antibiotics, use Bactrim Rifampin or Clindamycin Rifampin ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:159
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 46
Provided by: elizabeth161
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CommunityAssociated MRSA: Community Interventions


1
Community-Associated MRSA Community Interventions
  • Elizabeth A Bancroft, MD, SM
  • Acute Communicable Disease Control
  • Los Angeles County Department of Health Services

2
THREE CORE FUNCTIONS OF PUBLIC HEALTH
  • Assessment
  • Policy Development
  • Assurance

3
Reduce Morbidity and Mortality due to CAMRSA
  • Surveillance
  • Determine scope of problem
  • Allocate resources
  • Empiric diagnosis and treatment
  • Determine risk factors
  • Education/Guidelines
  • Healthcare professionals
  • Community
  • Facilities
  • Outbreak control

4
Pediatric MRSA in Los Angeles County
  • Reportable disease
  • Hospitalized between May 5-November 7, 2003
  • Medical, demographic information collected
  • Standardized questionnaire for parents/caregivers
  • Risk factors

5
Age Range of Pediatric MRSA Cases
N140
6
Clinical Findings
  • Diagnoses
  • 129 (92) SSTI
  • 10 (9) Invasive
  • 1 (1) Other
  • Treatment 75 received ß-lactam antibiotics
  • 23 misdiagnosed as spider bites

7
Risk Factors
  • The parents or guardians of 80 cases were
    interviewed
  • 11 of the cases had exposure in the past month
    to someone who had been incarcerated
  • 22 of the cases had nosocomial/traditional risk
    factors for MRSA
  • 24 had a household contact with an SSTI within a
    month of diagnosis

8
Laboratory Results
  • Of 83 isolates
  • 79 (96) were USA 300 PFGE
  • This was true even for the 22 of children that
    had nosocomial risk factors.

9
Public Health Impact of CAMRSA
  • Relative to the most common reportable diseases,
    CAMRSA has a high rate of hospitalization for
    those lt18 years old (10.3 per 100,000 PY)

10
Education
  • Healthcare professionals
  • Improve diagnosis
  • Improve treatment
  • Recognize risk factors
  • Improve prevention
  • General Public
  • Prevent acquisition of disease
  • Prevent sequelae
  • Prevent spread of disease

11
Education for Physicians
12
Education for Patients
13
Handouts for Physicians and Patients
14
Guidelines
  • Treatment
  • Healthcare professionals
  • Wisconsin, Washington State, CDC
  • Prevention
  • Athletic teams (CDC)
  • Environmental Control

15
(No Transcript)
16
(No Transcript)
17
Clinical Management/Prevention Guidelines
18
CDC/MMWR Guidelines for Athletic Teams (2003/52
33 793-795)
  • Cover all wounds. If a wound cannot be covered
    adequately, consider excluding players with
    potentially infectious skin lesions from practice
    or competitions until the lesions are healed or
    can be covered adequately.
  • Encourage good hygiene, including showering and
    washing with soap after all practices and
    competitions.
  • Ensure availability of adequate soap and hot
    water.
  • Discourage sharing of towels and personal items
    (for example, clothing or equipment).
  • Establish routine cleaning schedules for shared
    equipment.
  • Train athletes and coaches in first aid for
    wounds and recognition of wounds that are
    potentially infected.
  • Encourage athletes to report skin lesions to
    coaches and encourage coaches to assess athletes
    regularly for skin lesions.

19
Environmental/Community Guidelines
20
Los Angeles County Department of Health Services
MRSA Web Page
http//lapublichealth.org/acd/MRSA.htm
21
Outbreak Control
  • Athletic teams
  • Correctional facilities
  • Military
  • Day care/developmentally disabled

22
Athletic Teams
  • 5 football teams (1 high school, 3 college, 1
    professional)
  • 1 rugby team
  • 2 wrestling teams
  • Scattered other case reports

23
Athletic Teams
  • 5 football teams (1 high school, 3 college, 1
    professional)
  • 1 rugby team
  • 2 wrestling teams
  • Scattered other case reports
  • More review articles on athletic team outbreaks
    than actual original articles.

24
Recurrent MRSA Outbreak in a College Football Team
  • In August 2002, two members of the same football
    team were hospitalized with MRSA skin infections
    within 1 week of each other
  • August/September of 2003, a recurrent outbreak of
    MRSA skin/soft-tissue infections was reported
    from the same team
  • 15 cases (6 hospitalized)
  • 8 players with MRSA nasal carriage (only 2
    infected)
  • Both years USA 300

25
Characteristics of Case-Players
  • 11 case-players out of 107 team members for an
    attack rate of 10.
  • Cases diagnosed during or 2 weeks end of training
    camp
  • Boil on elbow most common

26
Case-Control and Carrier-Control Study Results
  • Case-players 15 times more likely to share bars
    of soap with teammates and to have had
    preexisting cuts or abrasions.
  • Carrier-players 60 times more likely have locker
    adjacent to or across from teammate with an SSTI
    and 47 times more likely to have shared towels
    with teammates.
  • Carrier-players more likely to live on campus in
    a dormitory or fraternity house, higher mean
    number of roommates than those who lived in
    off-campus apartments (2.3 vs. 1.5).

27
Football Team Interventions
  • Interventions in 2002 and 2003
  • Hygiene education
  • Environmental cleaning
  • Hexachlorophene soap in showers for all players
    (x 1 month)
  • Active surveillance for skin lesions
  • Decolonized carriers with mupirocin
  • New cases in 2003 after discontinuation of
    hexachlorophene showers
  • With improved infection control- no more cases

28
Control in Other Athletic Teams
  • Risk Factors
  • Skin abrasions, shaving
  • Linemen
  • Sharing personal items
  • ? Environmental contamination (whirlpools)
  • Control measures (interventions)
  • Education
  • Mupirocin, chlorhexidine for all
  • Active Surveillance
  • Wound coverage
  • Increased environmental/equipment disinfection
  • Active surveillance
  • All but one successful in controlling the outbreak

29
Number of Adults in Correctional System 1980-2004
  • In 2004, nearly 7 million people were on
    probation, in jail or prison, or on parole at
    year end 2004 -- 3.2 of all U.S. adult residents
    or 1 in every 31 adults.
  • gt2 million were in detention facilities
  • ¼ on drug charges (1/3 of the women on drug
    charges)

30
MRSA Outbreaks in Correctional Facilities
  • Mississippi, Georgia, Texas, California, Missouri
  • Jail, prison, detention centers, juvenile halls
  • Anecdotal and press reports from around the
    country
  • Lawsuits
  • USA 300
  • FemalegtMale

31
Outbreak in Georgia Facility (2001)
  • 200 bed detention facility
  • 11 cases
  • Interventions
  • Active surveillance for skin infections
  • All treated with chlorhexidine
  • Infected inmates decolonized
  • Standardized and intensive wound care
  • Education
  • Successful short term eradication

32
MRSA in Los Angeles County Jail
  • June 2002, the Los Angeles County Department of
    Health Services was notified by the Los Angeles
    County Jail of an increase in MRSA positive
    cultures in inmates in the jail
  • First noticed in February
  • Attributed to spider bites
  • Non-biting spiders captured
  • Pesticides applied

33
Percentage of Wounds and S. aureus with MRSA
2002
34
Recommendations
  • Standardize diagnosis and treatment
  • Culture wounds
  • Use incision and drainage
  • If antibiotics, use Bactrim Rifampin or
    Clindamycin Rifampin
  • Recommended increased access to soap, change of
    garments
  • Screen inmates on admission
  • Increased environmental cleaning
  • Education of inmates and staff

35
Recommendations, cont.
  • Specialized educational materials developed
  • For inmates
  • Identification
  • Prevention
  • Environmental cleaning
  • For staff
  • Dedicated treatment wards/personnel
  • Doubled the laundry distribution

36
MRSA Cases in Inmates By Month of CultureLA
County, 2002 2006

37
MRSA Cases in Inmates By Month of CultureLA
County, 2002 2006

38
Time to First MRSA Culture in Inmates By Month
of CultureLA County, 2002 2005
Time from booking date to first positive MRSA
culture.

39
Time to First MRSA Culture in MenBy Month of
CultureLA County, 2002 2005
Time from booking date to first positive MRSA
culture.
40
Time to First MRSA Culture in WomenBy Month of
CultureLA County, 2002 2005
Time from booking date to first positive MRSA
culture.

41
Antibiotic Susceptibility Trends
42
Challenges to Control in Correctional Facilities
  • Close crowded living conditions
  • Low literacy
  • Limited supplies
  • Security more important
  • To inmates
  • To guards
  • Turnover
  • Outside risk factors
  • Homeless
  • Drug users

43
Other Populations
  • Military Daycare/developmentally disabled
  • Share similar problems
  • Close crowded living conditions
  • Increased skin to skin contact
  • Sub-optimal hygiene
  • Controlled by
  • Hygiene education
  • Screening
  • Chlorhexidine/mupirocin
  • Increased environmental cleaning

44
Outbreak Control What We Dont Know
  • What is the most effective part of control?
  • Usefulness of surveillance for colonization
  • Significance of MRSA colonization
  • Role of decolonization
  • Significance of MRSA in the environment as a
    source of disease
  • Who/When should be excluded from work, sports,
    other activities?

45
Other Challenges
  • Difficulty in surveillance
  • Antibiograms not specific
  • Lack of resources for intensive surveillance
  • Changing case definitions
  • Conservation of USA 300
  • How to change medical practice
  • Need to know local prevalence
  • Decrease use of antibiotics
  • How to change consumer behavior
  • Improve personal hygiene
  • Improve environmental disinfection
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com