Swine flu has taken us all by surprise. This virus helps MRSA living in the nose and hand enter your body producing pnemonia that kill.
Common practical procedure performed in using hand in the hospitals are IV Drips, IV Cannulae, Phlebotomy (blood tests) help CA-MRSA enter blood stream. This bacteraemia can produce serious systemic illness because the enzyme released cause inflammation, drawing the immune cells to the infection site, at which time they destroy the immune cells. It takes only five minutes of exposure for the immune cells to be damaged and about an hour for their destruction. These findings appeared in Sunday's online edition of the journal "Nature Medicine."
Until we find an antibiotic that can kill the bacteria, we must prevent their entry into the body to reduce spread.
We in Medifix are trying hard to bring in changes to various practical procedures. Our mission is to reduce the spread of this Superbug threat. This video is published to educate healthcare professionals and you.
We are at war with infection. This is complex, but tries to read about this without becoming too bored, as your life may depend on it, and we don't want to lose you.
"Your Life In Their Hands"
www.medifix.co.uk
i got mrsa at my hosptial , it entered my body when i had an infeciton (cellulitis) now i have it always and anytime i get a cut it can get infected.. im constantly getting abcesses no i have open cuts.
i dont know what to do about doctors dont say anything just that you got it
redneckboy6983 1 year ago
I am sorry to hear that you are now colonised with these bacteria. I know what you are going through but you must also know that doctors are "Not God", they probably know less about these infections than you.
I have published websites and article, just google my name (medifix) . Get well soon, you can and you will if you try hard and fight
medifix 1 year ago
and this video is pretty wrong by saying CA-MRSA is Vancomycine resistent... CA just stands for community associated M(ethicillin)RSA..
if it would be resistent against Vancomycine it's called VRSA...
bjaesis 2 years ago
Yes, this could be VRSA, but you must know Staphylococcus is now we also have LRSA.
medifix 2 years ago