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Superbugs aren’t super. They’re horrible! This time we’re exploring superbugs, the harmful bacteria that have developed resistance to at least one of the antibiotics usually used to treat them. Mostly found in healthcare settings and causing more deaths every year, there’s an ongoing battle to find ways to treat them.
Fortunately UVC light kills bacteria by destroying their DNA and RNA, which means healthcare settings can be made a lot safer. While the threats we’re about to mention don’t all appear on our
UVC kill list, there’s no reason why they won’t be rendered harmless just as effectively as any other bacterium by a fast, powerful dose of UVC at the perfect wavelength - which is why healthcare settings have
used UVC disinfection to keep patients and workers safe since the 1930s.
Multidrug-resistant bacteria - MRSA
MRSA is resistant to several popular antibiotics, in particular the penicillin antibiotic methicillin. It usually lives harmlessly on human skin but once in the bloodstream can colonise and cause damage deep inside: in heart valves, bones, operation wounds and around medical devices. MRSA can be deadly.
Multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter
Found naturally in soil and water, the Acinetobacter baumannii variant is responsible for about 80% of illnesses caused by this kind of bacterium. Most common in intensive care units and other places where people are very ill, it can lead to pneumonia, various infections, and many other conditions. In some cases there’s no effective treatment.
Multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa
This is a common bacteria found in the environment, which can end up giving you ear, skin or eye infections if you pick it up from being in water. It can make people with weak immune systems very ill with severe blood, respiratory tract and wound infections. An increasing number of cases are proving impossible to treat.
Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae
Carbapenems are penicillin antibiotics. Enterobacteriaceae include Escherichia coli (E.coli), Klebsiella, Salmonella, Shigella and Yersinia pestis, all responsible for serious illness in older people and those with weak immune systems: endocarditis, pneumonia, dysentery and late-onset sepsis in babies are all risks. There have been some cases where no treatment is effective, which means there’s no way to stop the infection for good. The same goes for extended-spectrum ESBL-producing Enterobacteriaceae.
Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE)
The antibiotic vancomycin is often used to treat Enterococci. People are more likely to get VRE when they’ve been treated with vancomycin before, have had to take other antibiotics long-term, have a weak immune system, a permanent medical device like a catheter fitted, or have had an operation.
E.coli H30-Rx
E. coli lives in our guts and is usually harmless. There are many types of E. coli, some of which give us food poisoning and others more serious infections like cystitis and gastrointestinal infections. The H30-Rx strain is resistant to fluoroquinolones antibiotics, and for some strains there’s no effective treatment.
UVC disinfection – Perfect for care homes and healthcare settings
If your healthcare setting isn’t using UVC to disinfect the air and surfaces yet, or you’d like to protect your employees, customers and visitors from bacteria, viruses and all sorts of other health threats made harmless by UVC light, get in touch for an inspiring conversation.