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"Staph" or Community-Associated Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CAMRSA) Information





Basic Facts and Background

Staphylococcus aureus, commonly referred to as “Staph,” are bacteria found in the nose or skin. Staph are the most common cause of skin infections. Some Staph have developed resistance to the most common family of antibiotics that treat skin and blood infections. These Staph are called methicillin (antibiotic)-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). MRSA infections are common in hospitals and other healthcare settings, like dialysis centers or nursing homes. MRSA infections in hospitals often affect the very old and the very young or the very sick. However, recently MRSA infections have been found in healthy people outside of the hospital. Most of these MRSA infections are found in the skin and soft-tissue (muscle, fascia, fat). Since they occur in people in the community, they are referred to as community-associated MRSA (or CAMRSA) infections.

CAMRSA is clinically and genetically different from MRSA infections that people acquire in healthcare settings. The information below should help consumers and healthcare professionals understand CAMRSA as a new and emerging disease.

Information for Consumers
Information for Clinicians
  • Public Health Grand Rounds: CAMRSA Archived webcast that examines the case of Seattle-King County, Washington, a metropolitan community, whose public health department is building partnerships, providing education, and making surveillance a top priority to prevent the spread of antimicrobial resistance. Includes resources on preventing MRSA in athletic settings.
  • Heterosexual Transmission of Community-Associated MRSA Documented (Reuters Health Information, February 2007) Clinicians in New York have identified three households in which there was clinical, microbiological, and molecular epidemiological evidence of heterosexual transmission of community-associated methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA).
  • Pro-MED Resources: on Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus, for physicians. After clicking "Search Archives" in the left column, type in MRSA as a search word and then hit "search" for a list of recent news articles from around the world about MRSA.
Medscape Articles *

    * A subscription is required to view Medscape articles. Some identifying information will need to be provided. Subscriptions to Medscape are free at this time.


Other ACDC MRSA Web Pages
MRSA Home Page MRSA In L.A. County
Facts & Background MRSA by Subject
Education Materials CME Courses on CAMRSA
Guidelines & Recommendations Related Web Sites / Links
Myths & Misdiagnosis as Spider Bites Archive of Past News & Updates
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