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I'm guessing that you're asking this because of the swab for MRSA?
S. Aureus is common flora on the skin. Anything that can get on the skin can get in the nose through contact.
Why do we swab the nose? I'm not a microbiologist, but the warm wetness of the nose is probably a more stable environment than the skin for SA and MRSA. Easier to swab a wet nose than dry skin.
We'd probably get better results from swabbing the taint, but I'd rather just swab the nose.
MRSA can be airborne. MRSA can also be in the ears. According to my ENT, many healthcare workers often have MRSA in their ears due to not cleaning stethoscopes properly after using with pts.
From my experience, you can have MRSA just about anywhere on the body.
If you had MRSA in the nose it would be possible to spread if you had an open wound or sore that you touched after digging around in your nose.
I suppose my original question should have asked- as nurses is it inevitable that we will all be mrsa carriers? Besides hand washing and PPE is there anything else we can do to protect ourselves?
1) Yes.
2) Not really. Being a carrier is pretty much inevitable. If NICU nurses have neg swabs, its because they're using Neosporin in the nares (coughcough) generally.
Considering that one of the fastest growing populations with MRSA infections are small children with ear infections (and I've seen green goo just dripping out of a kid's ear), I'm more concerned about the handle on a shopping cart at the grocery store as a fomite than I am the "ears" around my neck. People with MRSA aren't just confined to NHs and ICUs, these folks are or were out in the community, wiping their noses and touching elevator buttons, door handles, the pen at the bank, places where I'm not wearing gloves and there's not a alcohol foam bottle every 30 feet.
I'm guessing that you're asking this because of the swab for MRSA?S. Aureus is common flora on the skin. Anything that can get on the skin can get in the nose through contact.
Why do we swab the nose? I'm not a microbiologist, but the warm wetness of the nose is probably a more stable environment than the skin for SA and MRSA. Easier to swab a wet nose than dry skin.
We'd probably get better results from swabbing the taint, but I'd rather just swab the nose.
exactly. staph aureus lives on humans. some people's s. aureus happens to be the methicillin resistant variety.
I'm guessing that you're asking this because of the swab for MRSA?S. Aureus is common flora on the skin. Anything that can get on the skin can get in the nose through contact.
Why do we swab the nose? I'm not a microbiologist, but the warm wetness of the nose is probably a more stable environment than the skin for SA and MRSA. Easier to swab a wet nose than dry skin.
We'd probably get better results from swabbing the taint, but I'd rather just swab the nose.
Heh. You said 'taint'.
ilovemicrobiology
23 Posts
I am a new nursing student and was wondering how you get a colonization of mrsa in the nose? I know it's not airborn, is it from putting dirty fingers in/ near your nose? As a carrier does that make it easier to get an infection elsewhere on your body?
Any input appreciated!