File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
aka MRSA, have you guys heard about this shit? Supposedly killed more people than AIDS in the U.S. last year.
Over the last 2 weeks an apartment complex in my neighborhood has gotten totally infected with this shit. This one guys knee has a gigantic pus filled boil on it that is attracting flies. So he doesn't want to goto the hospital because he thinks they'll amputate it. Another lady has been in the hospital for a week because her blood has become infected and 1 of her kidneys has shutdown. Also my friend's two week old newborn has come down with it, and doctors are really worried.

This is crazy, I blame the gay people.

TL;DR - Wash your fucking hands now!
>> Anonymous
I herd one of the high schools in my city (Payton, Chifag here) got infected. One of the volleyball players scraped his knee of something infected and he got it and now he needs like 50 different operations and they had to shut down the school for like a week to disinfected it LOL
>> Doctor Thaddeus P. Westinghouse III, M.D., PhD !!szQToNGkp98
Yeah, MRSA is really prevalent in hospitals. Though it is resistant to most beta-lactam antibiotics, infections often respond well to treatment with glycopeptide antibiotics, and MRSA is not something you want to leave untreated. A small skin lesion can turn into full-blown sepsis and can easily kill you.
>> Anonymous
Hey look, antibacterial hand soap and overuse of antibiotics is biting us on the ass yet again!
>> Anonymous
I guarantee I am colonized too.

Anybody want some MRSA??? You can lick my work shoes for the high grade shit. Added bonus of VRE and C dif
>> Anonymous
It's more commonly referred to as Staph infection, OP. The type that's really worrying people now is in your original post; it's resistance to medication. It's very serious, it's been around for a long time, and WHENEVER you go into a hospital or care setting, it's important to ask doctor's and nurse's what their hospital rate of Staph infection is. They're required to keep serious track of it.

The guy with it on his knee? I would go nowhere near him ever again, and wipe down your body in Clorox wipes or some shit. He's not going to lose his leg; he's going to die. Move OP. Move or prepare to sue your landlord.
>> Doctor Thaddeus P. Westinghouse III, M.D., PhD !!szQToNGkp98
>>292462
A garden variety staph aureus infection is not at all the same thing as a MRSA infection.
>> Anonymous
>>292383

Troll troll is troll. MRSA hardly does anything to healthy people.
>> Anonymous
>>292462
Uhhh the best hospitals take the sickest patients....

who have MRSA, faggot
>> Anonymous
>>292467
Second sentence, "The type that's really worrying people now is in your original post; it's resistant to medication."

I realize I fucked up the grammar... but thanks anyways.
>> Anonymous
>>292487
Hospitals are prime locations to spread Staph infections and they can also do a lot to PREVENT it from spreading from patient to patient within the hospital. It's a very common infection that jumps patient to patient. It says something about the hospital standards if they have a high rate of Staph infections. Welcome to the real world, faggot.
>> Anonymous
>>292497
I deal with contact precautions daily and have worked in some great hospitals in the Midwest.

We have a ton of patients come in with MRSA from other hospitals and nursing homes.

We probably have a higher MRSA percentage than a smaller community hospital, because they all send us their worst patients.

Figure it out man