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emotedcreations

emotedcreations

Germany
July 2006

JAN 19, 2008 03:42 AM

I hugged two gay guys tonight, and I still love Fatality. Great article...

SockPuppet

SockPuppet

I'm lost
July 2006

JAN 19, 2008 01:40 PM

Nessuno said:

Bastardo said:
At the risk of sounding like an insensitive prick, I'm a little more concerned by the fact that this strain is only affected by 4 to 5 types of antibiotics when it used to be around 8.



That doesn't make you insensitive, that shows priority. Whether or not this will be used against the gay community, in terms of the huge PR battle being fought over homosexuality, is not as pressing as an infection becoming more and more resistant to antibiotics. I wish there was a way to stop all those who abuse the use of antibiotic lotions, overprotective mothers, neurotic germophobes, etc., from using said antibiotic lotions, creams and sprays. Maybe the rate of super-viruses might be checked a little then. There really should be more media attention about this side of the story.



But that would imply that evolution actually works...

Kennikins

Kennikins

Moses Lake, WA
June 2007

JAN 19, 2008 03:39 PM

I must agree with you on the fact that since we've been using more anti-bacterial products, we now have more super-bugs. It doesn't help that you have those people who get a stuffy nose and have to straight to the doctor to get some medicine when their body's natural immune system would have taken care of the problem in the same amount of time.

SockPuppet

SockPuppet

I'm lost
July 2006

JAN 19, 2008 04:25 PM

KendraTheCurst said:
I must agree with you on the fact that since we've been using more anti-bacterial products, we now have more super-bugs. It doesn't help that you have those people who get a stuffy nose and have to straight to the doctor to get some medicine when their body's natural immune system would have taken care of the problem in the same amount of time.



More to the point, when people go to the doctor for antibiotics for a viral infection, it is their body's natural immune system taking care of the problem in the same amount of time. Antibiotics don't work on viruses.



PRockGirlScout

PRockGirlScout

Portland, OR
October 2005

JAN 19, 2008 04:37 PM

LostLucy said:
While I appreciate that the LBGTQ community needs to be aware for purposes of health management and prevention and treatment, I also find the press release offensive and prone to yes, spurring on more homophobic retribution!!!



What is "homophobic retribution?" confused

asbestosman

asbestosman

Australia
October 2005

JAN 20, 2008 04:19 PM

LostLucy said: I hear these horrendous news bites about a "Gay superbug"



That is just wrong. It's the gay MEN that are to blame. the superbug is probably abstinent.

BurningKrome

BurningKrome

San Jose, CA
April 2005

JAN 24, 2008 11:23 PM

ohash said:
...he blames all the super-colds and super-flus on the fact that we've trained our immune systems to be "wussies". There have actually been studies done (google it, I'm lazy) on how all the antibacterial products are probably WORSE for us then the occassional germ.



Although your sentiments are in the right place, the issue is not so much that our immune systems are being weakened, it's that the infectious agents have become strengthened.

Many bacteria have always had the ability to modify their surface proteins in a single active infection in order to avoid immune detection. The abundant use of antibiotic cremes, gels, soaps, ETC. simply uses this natural tendency and the evolution of rapidly multiplying bacteria to produce resistant strains.

As for CA-MRSA in general...

Although the infection appears to be a new strain not normally associated with transmission in the healthcare system, it is still predominantly only extremely dangerous to immune-compromised individuals. The original MRSA strains existed in 25-30% of the general population and did not develop into dangerous infections until something suppressed the immune system (such as surgery, trauma, or immune illness).

This is similar to the fact that all people have the bacteria that causes strep throat in their throats all the time. It only becomes an "infection" when the population gets out of whack.

From the CDC's site regarding CA-MRSA


In 2000, CDC began investigating outbreaks of staphylococcal infections among inmates at correctional facilities in Mississippi, Georgia, and Texas. Remarkably...the same strain was causing infection in all three facilities. This strain type, called USA300, was subsequently isolated from children in Tennessee and Texas, sports participants, military recruits, and men who have sex with men. This strain type...was not multidrug- resistant and had very different virulence factors.

Results from a CDC-funded study conducted in 2004 showed that the USA300 MRSA strain was the most common cause of skin infections among patients treated at 11 emergency departments located across the United States, suggesting that this strain had already become an important cause of skin infection in the United States. The USA300 strain has been found to cause infections in professional football players, military recruits in boot camp, children in daycare, and in crystal methamphetamine users.

CA-MRSA skin infections are known to spread in crowded settings; in situations where there is close skin-to-skin contact; during participation in activities that result in abraded or compromised skin surfaces; when potentially contaminated personal items such as towels, sporting equipment, and razors are shared; when the ability to maintain personal hygiene is compromised; and when access to healthcare is limited.

...JAMA ...showed that the number of people developing serious MRSA infections (i.e., invasive) in 2005 was about 94,360...only 15% of which were due to the CA-MRSA. Approximately 85% of these MRSA infections were associated with healthcare; moreover, among the more than 18,000 persons who died from invasive MRSA, 92% had HA-MRSA [not CA-MRSA].



So, yet again...another mid-level MD talking out of his ass to the press and/or another "scientific" reporter who didn't understand what the fuck the ass-doctor was saying and fucking it up in translation.

Moral...yes, feel free to hug a gay person or a lesbian or your cat as you see fit, but be careful about picking your nose after a major surgery (as this is the most likely way to get a serious MRSA).

Hugs
BK

chryssi

chryssi

Slidell, LA
June 2006

JAN 26, 2008 09:34 AM

My grandmother just passed away from MRSA. She caught it while in the hospital for a blood transfusion. What is really scary is the day after she left the hospital to come home and die another elderly person we know was put in the same room without it being disinfected. My grandmother had been in that room for 2 weeks dying from this infection and then they did not even bleach anything in the room to make sure the next patient did not catch it.

I wish the media would take an interest in the fact that this bug is killing people, all people, not just gay men. The hospitals are responsible. The doctors are responsible. They are the ones spreading it because of poor hygiene and dirty instruments. Then they will not take responsibility because it is considered a risk of hospitalization. Someone needs to be held accountable. It is terrifying to think of dying from something as simple as a blood transfusion.

Pussyfoot

Pussyfoot

Janesville, WI
May 2005

JAN 26, 2008 02:00 PM

MRSA is most contagious while it is active. Symptoms are cold-like and diarrhea. It can also be like a flesh eating rash that is open and just won't heal and keeps spreading. It can never be cured. It is either active or dormant. When someone has active MRSA they go to the hospital and have antibiotics flushed through an IV until it goes dormant again. There is no telling when it will come back. It will always be contagious through blood or urine contact. Best way to keep from spreading it is frequent hand washing when in contact w/ someone who has it. Mostly the same precautions you have w/ someone who has aids. I work in a nursing home. That's how I know.

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