Overview
The rise in antimicrobial resistance in community and healthcare settings
is causing alarm among public health leaders, clinicians, and infectious
disease experts. "Staph" infections caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA) have received increasing attention in recent years.
New strains of MRSA have caused illness in persons without the usual
risk factor of a hospital stay or visit to a health care facility, places
where it was once largely confined. Community-associated MRSA, or CA-MRSA,
has caused outbreaks in several states and is the target of a public
health awareness campaign to prevent antimicrobial resistance. Join us
as we examine the case of Seattle-King County, Washington, a metropolitan
community, whose public health department is building partnerships, providing
education, and making surveillance a top priority to prevent the spread
of antimicrobial resistance.
Goal
This program will seek to increase awareness of antimicrobial resistance
and the public health response to CA-MRSA.
Objectives
- Identify populations at highest risk for CA-MRSA.
- Identify three
common factors associated with transmission of CA-MRSA.
- Describe
the role of health departments in response to CA-MRSA.
- Describe the
role of clinicians in response to CA-MRSA.
- List three potential
CA-MRSA prevention strategies.
Audience
Public health leaders, managers, and professionals from local and state
health departments, laboratories, hospitals, community-based health organizations,
boards of health, academic institutions, federal agencies, and others
who are concerned about antimicrobial resistance and the rise in resistant
bacterial infections in community settings.
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