FocusCanada Forums

Full Version: Adults, Children Across Canada Sick From Superbug
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
Adults, children across Canada sick from superbug
Updated Wed. Jun. 28 2006 11:18 AM ET

CTV.ca News Staff

A superbug that first targeted vulnerable carriers such as prison inmates and intravenous drug users is now sweeping across Canada, sickening healthy adults and children in a number of Canadian provinces.

Researchers at the Canadian Medical Association Journal reported the development Tuesday in a number of articles that were rushed to print in order to raise awareness.

Forms of the drug-resistant bug known as community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus -- or CA-MRSA -- are causing skin and soft-tissue infections which are often difficult to treat, along with weeping wounds that don't heal.

In the most startling development, strains labelled USA300 and USA400 have also led to severe illness and even death in carriers who were healthy before they caught the bug.

"It's sweeping across the nation, no doubt about it," Dr. John Conly, senior author of one of the papers and an expert on CA-MRSA told The Canadian Press.

"I think this is a pan-Canadian problem."

The bug, and other antibiotic resistant infections caused by strains of Staph aureus, have in the past spread in hospitals where heavy drug use has created an environment where drug-resistant bacteria can flourish.

Especially susceptible groups have included homeless people, residents of shelters, intravenous drug users, people who smoke crack cocaine, prison inmates and men who have sex with men.

The bug is believed to spread more readily in environments that include skin-to-skin contact, poor hygiene and crowding.

But in recent years the emergence of MRSA strains have been reported in Australia, the U.S. and Europe, outside of hospital settings.

Incidents are most common in the U.S., where the so-called superbug has been showing up in day-care centres and on sports teams -- infecting hundreds of thousands of people.

Conly says the infection wave has crossed the border into Canada, and Calgary has already reported more than 300 cases of CA-MRSA, that resulted in several deaths.

"So this is really quite a serious issue and I think it's an important one from a standpoint of Canadian physicians to realize that this is not actually something south of the border but has swept up from the southwestern United States and is now sweeping across Canada," Conly told CP.

Increased numbers of cases have been reported in communities in B.C., Saskatchewan and Manitoba.

Toronto is also experiencing an upswing in numbers, up from one or two per year in 2001, to as many as 15 cases last year just at Mount Sinai Hospital.

While some of those cases were in at-risk individuals, a number of them occurred in patients who showed no sign of being at risk.

This is worrisome to experts, who are now urging Canadian physicians to work together to tackle the problem before it becomes worse, and to pay close attention to patients with skin and soft-tissue infections who may be suffering from CA-MRSA.

With files from The Canadian Press