Showing posts with label Superbug. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Superbug. Show all posts

Sunday, February 10, 2013

A Pair Of Sunday Morning Referrals

 

 


# 6919

 

 

It’s a pretty quiet morning across flublogia, and while I’m still digging around for a topic to blog on, Crof and Maryn McKenna both have entries well worth your time.

 

First stop, Maryn McKenna’s wired science Superbug Blog.

 

Antibiotics And Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria In Meat: Not Getting Better

 

 

After which you’ll want to visit Crofsblog and read Crof’s thoughtful piece on the as-yet unbridged cultural, societal, and technological chasms that keep billions of people living (and dying) much as their ancestors did during the middle ages.

 

Thinking about H5N1

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Referral: McKenna On MRSA In UK Milk

 

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MRSA - Photo Credit – CDC PHIL 

# 6805

 

 

During the summer of 2011 news of a new strain of MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) found in milk in the UK made considerable headlines. 

 

Although I wrote about it in UK: `New MRSA’ Strain Spreading, the real expert in all things antibiotic resistant in the blogosphere is Maryn Mckenna on her Superbug Blog, who provided in-depth coverage in More MRSA, in milk: A new strain in cows and humans.

 

Today Maryn is back with another report, this time on the detection of the ST398 strain of MRSA, recently detected in Milk produced in England.

 

Follow the link below to read:

 

Livestock MRSA Found For First Time In UK Milk

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

McKenna: Remembering SARS & The New Coronavirus

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Coronavirus – Credit CDC PHIL

 

# 6587

 

Maryn McKenna has penned a terrific look back at the SARS epidemic of 2002-2003, along with analysis of why this newly discovered coronavirus has so unnerved public health officials.

 

Maryn tells a medical detective story better than anyone I know, so I’ll simply invite you to click on the link below and read:

 

 

Why The New Coronavirus Unnerves Public Health: Remembering SARS

 

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Maryn McKenna Video On Disease, Cities, and Our Crowded Future

 

 

# 6512

 

Maryn McKenna, everyone’s favorite `scary disease girl’, has a new blog post up, along with a link to her 70 minute video presentation at the Science Gallery’s Hack The City gathering this summer in Dublin.

 

When you can set aside a little more than an hour of your undivided attention, by all means go and watch:

 

Diseases, Cities And The Coming Crowded Future

  •  Maryn McKenna August 22, 2012
  • image
  • Highly recommended.

     

    If you haven’t already, you may want to read Maryn’s terrific 2010 book Superbug: The Fatal Menace of MRSA.  Here is a link to my review.

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    Wednesday, August 01, 2012

    Referral: McKenna On Pertussis Vaccines

     

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    # 6465

     

     

    Maryn McKenna has a terrific blog this morning about an extraordinarily difficult subject – the recent rise in Pertussis cases even among those who have previously been vaccinated.

     

    I’ll just step aside and invite you to read:

     

     

    Is Childhood Pertussis Vaccine Less Effective Than We Thought?

     

    Thursday, July 12, 2012

    Referral: McKenna On Resistant UTIs

     

     

    # 6429

     

    Maryn McKenna, everybody’s favorite scary disease girl, has a double whammy for us this morning.  A blog post, and an extended investigative report in The Atlantic, on the suspected link between resistant UTIs and the routine feeding of antibiotics to poultry.

     

    First stop, is Maryn’s SUPERBUG BLOG, where she previews her investigative article – produced with the Food & Environment Reporting Network.

     

    Investigation: Drug Resistance, Chicken And 8 Million UTIs

    By Maryn McKenna  July 11, 2012

     

    If Maryn’s blog post is a tasty Hors d'oeuvre, then the main course is served up in The Atlantic.

     

    How Your Chicken Dinner Is Creating a Drug-Resistant Superbug

    By Maryn McKenna

    Jul 11 2012, 5:16 PM ET 1

    Continuing to treat urinary tract infections as a short-term, routine ailment rather than a long-term food safety issue risks turning the responsible bacteria into a major health crisis.

    (Continue . . . )

     

     

    Both pieces are highly recommended.

     

    And finally, for anyone who has not yet read Maryn’s terrific 2010 book Superbug: The Fatal Menace of MRSA, a link to my review.

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    Wednesday, June 06, 2012

    Referral: McKenna Times Four

     

     

    # 6367

     

     

    Maryn McKenna has two new blogs up, both dealing with the dangers of antibiotics in livestock, and a new article in SELF Magazine, and all three are very much worth taking the time to read this morning.

     

    As an added bonus, Maryn will also be conducting a twitter chat tomorrow (details below), so block out an hour of your time and start thinking about your questions.

     

    While I scrounge around looking for something for my own blog this morning, I would invite you to jump over to Maryn’s site to read:

     

    Court Scolds FDA Over Ag Antibiotic Use

     

     

    The Superbugs In Your Dinner (Bonus: Twitterchat!)

     

     

    As her second blog explains, Maryn has a major new article up on SELF Magazine, and tomorrow Maryn will hold a twitter chat.  The details from Maryn’s blog follow:

     

    Now: Bonus! With SELF’s help, Lisa and I are going to conduct a Twitterchat tomorrow (Thursday, June 7), starting at 4 pm ET and going for an hour. To participate, follow me (@marynmck), Lisa (@adamslisa) or SELF (@SELFMagazine), or watch for the hashtag #superbugs. Send us your questions in advance or during the chat. We really want to hear from you.

     

     

    And finally, for anyone who has not yet read Maryn’s eye-opening 2010 book Superbug: The Fatal Menace of MRSA, a link to my review.

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    Wednesday, February 22, 2012

    Video: Maryn McKenna On Antibiotic Resistance

     

     

     

    # 6163

     

    Short of seeing a 1918-level or worse pandemic, I’ve little doubt that the rise of antibiotic resistant bacteria will be the number one public health story of the next couple of decades.

     

    While MRSA was the big concern 3 or 4 years ago, today we are seeing the rise and geographic spread of NDM-1, extremely drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB), along with an expanding array of Carbapenemases  – bacteria that are resistant to the Carbapenem class of antibiotics.

     

     

    Journalist, author, and everybody’s favorite scary disease girl Maryn McKenna produced a terrific book on the subject of antibiotic resistance in 2010, called SUPERBUG: The Fatal Menace Of MRSA

     

    You can read my review of it HERE. Maryn is also the author of Beating Back The Devil, the inside story of the CDC’s Epidemic Intelligence Service.  

     

    All of which puts Maryn on the top of the list of people you’d want to include in any documentary on antibiotic resistance. As it happens, UJI Films is working on exactly that; a film scheduled to be release later this year called RESISTANCE.

     

    We’ve a bit of a preview this morning, by way of a 4-minute excerpt from the film featuring Maryn. You’ll also find several other short film clips on the resistancethefilm Youtube Channel, as well.

     

     

    Friday, January 13, 2012

    NPR Science Friday: McKenna On Resistant TB

     


    # 6069

     

     

    Later today (Friday, January 13th) Maryn McKenna will be a guest during the first hour (2 –3 pm EST) on NPR’s Science Friday to discuss the recent detection of a dozen cases of tuberculosis in India said to be `totally resistant’ to current antibiotic treatment.

     

     

     

    Friday, January 13th, 2012

    New Tuberculosis Strain Thwarts All Antibiotics

    Physicians in India have discovered a strain of tuberculosis they call ‘TDR’ for ‘Totally Drug-Resistant’--meaning there is no antibiotic available to fight it. Maryn McKenna, author of Superbug , discusses the possible origins of the strain, and what options--if any--doctors have to treat it.

    Guests

    Maryn McKenna
    Author, "
    Superbug: The Fatal Menace of MRSA," (Free Press, 2010)
    Blogger,
    Wired
    Atlanta, Georgia

     

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    Maryn, who is Flublogia’s resident expert on everything drug resistant, has written twice this week about this new development in her Superbug Blog, links to which you’ll find below:

     

     

    Totally Resistant TB: Earliest Cases in Italy

    India Reports Completely Drug-Resistant TB

    Wednesday, September 14, 2011

    McKenna Wins 2011 Science In Society Award For Superbug

     

     


    # 5938

     

     

    When I reviewed Maryn McKenna’s Book Superbug: The Fatal Menace of MRSA I wrote:

     

    In moments of quiet reverie I often find myself wishing I could dance like Astaire, or maybe sing like Sinatra, or perhaps compose like Gershwin.

    But in truth, I’d happily settle for being able to write about science and medicine as well as does Maryn McKenna. (see my full review)

     

    image

     

    I’m happy to report that others feel the same way about Maryn’s talents. It has just been announced that Maryn will receive the NASW 2011 Science in Society Journalism Award for her book Superbug.

     

     

    2011 Science in Society Awards

    The winners of the 2011 Science in Society Journalism Awards, sponsored by the National Association of Science Writers, are:

    • In the Book category, Maryn McKenna for her book Superbug: The Fatal Menace of MRSA (Free Press).

    • In the Science Reporting category, Katy Butler for her New York Times Magazine article, “My Father’s Broken Heart”

    • In the Science Reporting for a Local or Regional Audience category, Barbara Moran for her Boston Globe Magazine article, “Power Politics.”

    • In the Commentary or Opinion category, Charles Homans, for his Columbia Journalism Review article, “Hot Air.”

    Winners in each category receive a cash prize of $2,500, to be awarded at a reception on October 15, 2011, during the ScienceWriters2011 meeting taking place this year in Flagstaff, Arizona.

     

     

    Congratulations Maryn.  This is a well deserved honor.

     

    And congratulations, of course, go to the other winners as well.

    Wednesday, August 03, 2011

    Referral: McKenna On Drug Resistant Salmonella

     

     


    # 5732

     

     

    Maryn McKenna, author of Superbug: The Fatal Menace of MRSA and of the Superbug Blog, has posted this evening with fresh details on the dual Salmonella outbreaks I blogged on this morning.

     

    She includes breaking news on the recall of 36 million pounds of ground turkey by Cargill Inc. over reports of possible Salmonella contamination.

     

    As this is a subject with which she is well acquainted, I would urge you to direct your browser to her site to read:

     

     

    Highly Resistant Salmonella: Poultry, Antibiotics, Borders, Risk

    Monday, July 04, 2011

    Referral: Maryn McKenna From The WCSJ

     

     

     

    # 5671

     

    Maryn McKenna, blogger, science writer, and author of Superbug: The Fatal Menace of MRSA is attending the WCSJ (World Conference of Science Journalists) in Doha, Qatar and has produced (thus far) two blogs on the proceedings.

     

    Like everything Maryn writes, both are well worth your time and consideration. So, without further delay, I’ll step out of the way and post the links.

     

     

    WCSJ: Plant Diseases, Farmer Suicides And The Peril of A Hungry Future

    WCSJ: Maybe The Biggest Disease Threat Isn’t Infectious At All

    Tuesday, June 28, 2011

    Referral: McKenna On Drug Resistant E. Coli And Chickens

     

     


    # 5658

     

     

    Maryn McKenna writing on her Superbug Blog today has the details of a new study out of the Netherlands which appears in the June edition of the CDC’s EID Journal  that takes close look at the genetic make up of drug resistant E. Coli carried by chickens and that carried by humans.

     

    As Maryn tells us – assuming this study is correct – this research would appear to provide additional support to many scientist’s concerns over a link between the use of antibiotics in agriculture and the emergence of resistant pathogens in humans.

     

    The study may be read at:

     

    Volume 17, Number 7–July 2011
    Research

    Extended-Spectrum β-Lactamase Genes of Escherichia coli in Chicken Meat and Humans, the Netherlands

    Ilse Overdevest, Ina Willemsen, Martine Rijnsburger, Andrew Eustace, Li Xu, Peter Hawkey, Max Heck, Paul Savelkoul, Christina Vandenbroucke-Grauls, Kim van der Zwaluw, Xander Huijsdens, and Jan Kluytmans

     

     

    But for the short course, by a writer well-versed in the subject, I would refer you to Maryn’s article today.

     

     

    Is Drug Resistance in Humans Coming From Chickens?

    Wednesday, April 06, 2011

    Referral: McKenna On World Health Day

     

     


    # 5467

     

     

     

    As I noted in my blog yesterday World Health Day 2011, Maryn McKenna is Flublogia’s go-to person for all things antimicrobial. While her SUPERBUG Blog  covers an eclectic range of subjects, its primary focus has always been on antibiotic use, misuse, and resistance.

     

    Her book SUPERBUG: The Fatal Menace of MRSA serves as a badly needed wakeup call on the rising tide of resistant organisms (not just MRSA).

     

    With tomorrow’s World Health Day focusing on global antimicrobial resistance, it is not surprising that Maryn is all over the topic.  So I’ll just step out of the way and refer you to:

     

    World Health Day: Time to tackle resistance

    Saturday, January 29, 2011

    Referral: McKenna On Farm Vectors Of Resistant Bacteria

     

     


    # 5267

     

     

    Maryn McKenna has an important and illuminating post on gaps in our surveillance systems and the surprising ways that antibiotic resistant bacteria may be moving around, and off of, farms.

     

    Go read it, and I’ll be back with a brief note.

     

     

    Farm antibiotics, human illness and what connects them. (It has legs.)

     

     

    As an interesting aside, from time-to-time over the past 5 years, flies have also been mentioned as possible vectors of bird flu as well.   You’ll find a few of my blogs on the subject listed below.

     

    Indonesian Updates And Vector Concerns
    Houseflies Revisited
    Cats and Dogs and Flies, Oh My!

     

    All of which shows that the interconnections between man, other species, pathogens, and possible vectors are complex.

     

    And our understanding of how they fit together remains limited.

    Thursday, November 11, 2010

    Referral: Maryn McKenna Updates NDM-1

     

     

     

    # 5047

     

     

     

    Maryn McKenna, our resident expert on antimicrobial resistance (and author of Superbug: The Fatal Menace of MRSA) has a new blog entry today on a couple of EID Journal reports on the international spread of the NDM-1 resistance gene.

     

    NDM-1, the supergene: Further (community?) spread

     

    After you’ve read her latest update, click on this Superbug Blog link to read some of Maryn’s previous blogs on NDM-1 (and other issues).

     

    image

     

    And if you haven’t read Maryn’s book on MRSA, read my review, then go buy the book.

    Tuesday, October 12, 2010

    Referral: McKenna On Exotic Disease Threats

     

     


    # 4977

     

     

    Maryn McKenna, everyone’s favorite `scary disease girl’, brings us details of a recent importation of Lassa fever into the United States in her Wired Superbug blog, and at the same time discusses our visceral fears of  exotic and rare VHF’s (Viral hemorrhagic Fevers).

     

    Movies like Outbreak (1995) and books like Tom Clancy’s Executive Orders  have helped to instilled into western culture a deep seated dread and fascination for diseases like Lassa, Ebola, and Marburg.  

     

    This, despite the fact that more mundane killers like coronary artery disease, pneumonia, HAI’s (Hospital Acquired Infections) and influenza kill many hundreds of times more people each and every year.

     

    Maryn presents a thoughtful piece on the real dangers presented by these exotic diseases, our reactions to them, and along the way even manages to use the word `horripillate’ in a sentence.


    More than enough reasons to recommend that you read:

     

     

    Lassa fever: Coming to an airport near you

    By Maryn McKenna 

    Wednesday, October 06, 2010

    Referral: McKenna On C. Diff

     

     

    # 4963

     

     

    While I’ve been immersed in writing two earlier blogs this morning, our favorite `scary disease girl’ Maryn McKenna has served up a terrific piece on Clostridium difficile – or C. Diff as it is commonly called – as a potential food borne illness.

     

    I’ll simply step out of the way, suggest you skip breakfast, and direct you to:

     

    C. diff: Blame hospitals? Or food?

    Wednesday, August 11, 2010

    NDM-1: A New Acronym To Memorize

     

     

    UPDATE: 8/14/10    This has turned into a rapidly evolving story.  To see a list of the latest blog entries on NDM-1 click this link.

     

     

    UPDATE: 1900 hrs EST 8/11/10    Maryn McKenna has posted this evening on NDM-1 on her Superbug blog, going into far more depth and detail than I have here.

     

    By all means, you’ll want to read her post  NDM-1: Novel, global, complex and a serious threat.

     

     

    # 4796

     

     

    New Delhi metallo-ß-lactamase-1, or NDM-1, is an  emerging enzyme that can confer resistance to certain gram negative bacteria like E.coli and Klebsiella against a class of antibiotics called carbapenems.

     

    Carbapenems are newer generation beta-lactam antibiotics (a class that includes penicillins, cephalosporins, cephamycins, and carbapenems) that are usually reserved as an antibiotic of last resort.

     

    Up until recently, Carbapenems have been generally resistant to Beta-lactamases - enzymes bacteria use to breakup the ring structure of “beta-lactam” antibiotics - that renders them ineffective.

     

    But in recent years a new enzyme has been spreading in India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan that helps certain types of bacteria to defeat Carbapenem antibiotics; NDM-1.   

     

    Although NDM-1 has been around for some time, it is making the news today after the release of a Lancet Infectious Diseases article on its growing prevalence on the Indian sub-continent and its recent importation into the UK, US, and other countries.

     

    Travelling abroad for elective (usually cosmetic) surgery has become much in vogue in Europe and the United States, and that has created an opportunity for this enzyme to spread.

     

    While the numbers being reported in the UK are still small, one of the concerns is that this enzyme may find its way into other gram negative bacteria that may already have partial resistance to other classes of antibiotics, which could create a new multi-drug resistant superbug.

     


    The Lancet Infectious Diseases, Early Online Publication, 11 August 2010

    doi:10.1016/S1473-3099(10)70143-2Cite or Link Using DOI

    Emergence of a new antibiotic resistance mechanism in India, Pakistan, and the UK: a molecular, biological, and epidemiological study

    (EXCERPT)

    Findings

    We identified 44 isolates with NDM-1 in Chennai, 26 in Haryana, 37 in the UK, and 73 in other sites in India and Pakistan. NDM-1 was mostly found among Escherichia coli (36) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (111), which were highly resistant to all antibiotics except to tigecycline and colistin. K pneumoniae isolates from Haryana were clonal but NDM-1 producers from the UK and Chennai were clonally diverse.

     

    Most isolates carried the NDM-1 gene on plasmids: those from UK and Chennai were readily transferable whereas those from Haryana were not conjugative. Many of the UK NDM-1 positive patients had travelled to India or Pakistan within the past year, or had links with these countries.

     

    Interpretation

    The potential of NDM-1 to be a worldwide public health problem is great, and co-ordinated international surveillance is needed.

     

     

    For more on this story, the BBC has a Q&A style report at: Q&A: NDM-1 superbugs  and Reuters reports in Scientists find new superbug spreading from India.

     

    Some of the other media reports I’ve seen this morning are unnecessarily hyperbolic, although the potential threat is quite real. 

     

    Antibiotics are fleeting victories against bacteria at best, since from the minute they are introduced, bacteria begin to evolve ways to defeat them.  

     

    With very few new antibiotics in the pipeline, the world is in genuine danger of facing a future with far fewer resources to combat infections.

     

    Short of seeing a devastating pandemic, this may well be the `big’ medical story of the next couple of decades.

     

    Given the gravity of the situation, I can think of no better introduction to the world of antibiotic resistance than Maryn McKenna’s superb Superbug: The Fatal Menace of MRSA, which I reviewed last March.


    If you haven’t already read it, I highly recommend it.

     

    Superbug (MRSA) Book 
    My Review of SUPERBUG

    Monday, June 07, 2010

    SUPERBUG Moves To ScienceBlogs

     

     


    # 4630

     

     

    Congratulations are in order for Maryn McKenna today, as her superb SUPERBUG Blog has moved to new digs over on Scienceblogs. 

     

    I’ve updated the link in my sidebar, and would encourage everyone else to do the same, and to visit her site often.

     

    And if you’ve not read her latest book, Superbug: The Fatal Menace of MRSA you really owe it to yourself to get a copy.   It is a great read, and an eye-opener on a very serious subject as well.

     

    My review of the book is here.