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Results tagged “infectioncontrol” from 60 Second Science

Americans not particularly worried about antibiotic resistance

Despite the threat of a future in which we have few defenses against deadly bacterial infections, Americans don't seem to be too freaked out. We're still awfully good at over-using antibiotics (by, for instance, using them to treat the wrong types of infections) and not completing antibiotic treatment, both of which increase the risk of bacterial resistance, according to an abstract presented today at the International Conference on Emerging Infectious Diseases in Atlanta, Georgia.

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Could frogs save us from MRSA?

6984d_2253872591_01873f5317_m.jpgWhen it comes to the threat of antibiotic resistance, the World Health Organization doesn't mince words: some diseases, it says, "will have no effective therapies within the next ten years." Indeed, more than 70 percent of the bacteria that cause hospital-acquired infections are resistant to at least one of the antibiotics commonly used to treat them, and it's only going to get worse. But a chemical found on amphibian skin—produced in response to stress, injury, or contact with microorganisms—has just been found to kill some drug-resistant bacteria.

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Super-Superbugs Everywhere!

As if superbugs aren’t scary enough, a study published online today in Nature Medicine describes how the most sinister of them all—MRSA—has evolved special ammunition to disable human immune cells.

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