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“Our findings offer a potential practical pathway towards significantly reducing surgical site infection rates without risk to the health and safety of patients and medical personnel.”
David J. Brenner, Ph.D.
A 91 year old man recently died of an infection in hospital after being sent there following an accident on his mobility scooter. He’s just one of a booming number of MRSA cases in the UK and elsewhere. In England alone one person in 100,000 suffered from methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus or MRSA between April 2021 and March 2022.
At the same time Hospital-Acquired Infection Control Market revenues, estimated at $ 6.1 Billion in 2022, area expected to grow steadily between now and 2033 to ultimately hit an almighty $ 12.7 Billion.
Hospital-acquired infections are becoming more common thanks to more surgical procedures than ever, an ageing population, and ‘the increasing prevalence of chronic diseases’. It’s bad news for all of us. So let’s take a look at MRSA, a bacteria that’s resistant to many antibiotics, which makes it more challenging to treat than other bacterial infections.
About MRSA
Known as the ‘superbug’, MRSA stands for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. It mostly infects people in hospital. While antibiotics often work, sometimes they don’t.
The bacteria live on the skin of around 1 in 30 of us, colonising the nose, armpits, groin and buttocks. They spread skin-to-skin and also via shared towels, sheets and clothes, and when you touch something with the bacteria on it.
Having MRSA on your skin isn’t always a problem. It’ll usually go away, taking anything from a few days to a few months to disappear without you even noticing it. But if you’re vulnerable and it gets into your body it can cause serious illness, especially when you’re less able to fight it off because you are already ill or weak.
When it works its way into the skin of a vulnerable person MRSA causes swelling, heat, pain and pus, and the skin can go very red. If it goes deeper you can end up with a high temperature, chills, aches and pains, confusion and dizziness. If you are vulnerable it can easily kill you.
Many hospitals in the UK screen people for MRSA before admitting them. If they find MRSA on your skin you might be given treatment to get rid of it before you can be admitted. This could mean an antibacterial cream for the inside of your nose, used for 5 days. It can also involve antibacterial shampoo. You’ll also need to wash your own clothes and bedding at a high temperature separately from the rest of your household for five days.
If you become infected in hospital, antibiotics are the first step, taken by mouth or jab for as little as a few days to as long as a few weeks, and you’ll either be isolated or put on a ward with others who’ve caught MRSA. As you can see it’s inconvenient for patients, expensive for hospitals, and uses up vital healthcare resources. So is there a simple solution? Yes, there is.
A simple solution to fighting MRSA in healthcare
Can you imagine how tricky – and costly – it would be to have teams of human cleaners constantly cleaning and disinfecting hospitals, clinics and surgeries? Luckily there’s no need thanks to the specific UV light used in our technology, which kills MRSA without damaging human tissue. It’s a simple, low cost, and highly effective solution.
The far-UVC light emitted by our units, which come in a variety of shapes, sizes and functions, will not totally remove the risk of MRSI. Nothing can do that. But it can save time, money, and most importantly people’s lives. If you’d like to discuss how our tech kills MRSA wherever the light touches, within a few short minutes, we’ll be pleased to talk to you.