Poll: Does your unit use Bactroban for MRSA colonization?
Does your unit use Bactroban for MRSA colonization? 26 members have participated
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This topic was brought up in another thread and I thought it was worthy of a poll, considering the fact that MRSA is getting to be quite an issue in our hospitals...
Bactroban is a cream that is applied intranasally on patients who are colonized with MRSA. We only used it once in our NICU (with good results as baby swabbed negative after treatment) but haven't used it again. I'm guessing part of the reason many units are hesitant to use this medication has to do with the fact that there hasn't been much research done on the effects of Bactroban when used on infants. However, with MRSA becoming a problem in many NICUs, I can't help but wonder if it wouldn't be better to completely get rid of the MRSA rather than just cohorting patients.
My own unit swabs babies on admission and then every week after that. Positive infants are cohorted, and we use gown/glove precautions at the bedside. Once a baby tests positive for MRSA, he or she is on isolation precautions until discharge. Even the parents have to gown and glove, since they touch more than just their own infant when visiting (water fountains, door knobs, etc.).
What are your Neonatal ICU units doing?