{
    "href": "/post/2012/09/21/the-nih-superbug/",
    "relId": "2012/09/21/the-nih-superbug",
    "title": "The NIH Superbug",
    "author": "pmjones",
    "markup": "html",
    "tags": [
        {
            "href": "/tag/health-care/",
            "relId": "health-care",
            "title": "Health Care",
            "author": null,
            "created": null,
            "updated": [],
            "markup": "markdown"
        }
    ],
    "created": "2012-09-21 19:31:52 UTC",
    "updated": [
        "2012-09-21 19:31:52 UTC"
    ],
    "html": "<blockquote>\n<p>While in the Clinical Research Center, about a week after my return, I came down with pneumonia. This raised on the part of the staff a level of concern that, initially, I did not understand. Their worry was that I had what they called \u00e2\u0080\u009chospital pneumonia\u00e2\u0080\u009d and not the more ordinary \u00e2\u0080\u009ccommunity pneumonia.\u00e2\u0080\u009d The former was said to be resistant to antibiotics, and, on the off-chance that I had it, I was put on a cocktail of antibiotics, delivered intravenously, that I had never heard of. They were harsh and corrosive, and, after a day or so, the vein into which they had been introduced would collapse. In time, the staff in the Department of Infectious Diseases, managed to grow a culture on my sputum, and from this they learned that I had \u00e2\u0080\u009ccommunity pneumonia.\u00e2\u0080\u009d When the word came through, I was put on Amoxycylin, and I recovered with reasonable alacrity.</p>\n<p>What I did not know the time was that the previous summer a woman with an antibiotic-resistant strain of Klebsiella pneumoniae, who was in desperate straits, had been brought from another hospital to the Clinical Research Center at NIH; that the antibiotics given her had failed to do the job; that, in the six or seven months that followed, the disease had spread to seventeen other patients at NIH; and that five of these had, as a consequence, died. The \u00e2\u0080\u009chospital pneumonia\u00e2\u0080\u009d that the staff feared that I had contracted was the so-called superbug; and, as they almost certainly knew when they treated me, another patient \u00e2\u0080\u0093 a boy who had had arrived in April \u00e2\u0080\u0093 had been diagnosed with the disease on 25 July, the day after my return to the facility. He died this past week.</p>\n<p>That I am now cancer-free and that I did not contract the superbug is a matter of dumb luck, and it gives one an appreciation for what modern science can do and for what it cannot do. It should also give one pause.</p>\n<p>The particular superbug that ended the life of my fellow patient at NIH is found today in only 6% of American hospitals, but there are other antibiotic-resistant diseases lurking in other hospitals, such as Staphylococcus aureus, MRSA, E. coli, and Clostridium difficile, to mention just a few. In the years to come, their number will grow, and in the pipeline, I am told, there are almost no new antibiotics. If nothing is done, our children may live in a world akin to that of our forebears \u00e2\u0080\u0093 in which there are no antibiotics capable of being deployed against the most common diseases.</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>via <em><a href=\"http://www.ricochet.com/main-feed/The-NIH-Superbug\">The NIH Superbug - Ricochet.com</a></em>.</p>\n"
}
