Maryland Expected to Begin Tracking Hospital-Acquired MRSA Infections

Posted on December 20, 2007
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The Maryland Health Care Commission, an independent state regulatory agency, is expected to vote today for the state to consider methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, a reportable disease. There is currently no requirement for Maryland state and local health departments to track and record MRSA, the virulent superbug that can develop into a lethal infection.

Consideration of new reporting requirements began earlier this fall following an outbreak of over twenty MRSA infections in Montgomery County students. While none of those cases were fatal, a Maryland special education teacher died from MRSA-related complications earlier this month.

The Commission is currently seeking to develop a system for collecting and distributing data on healthcare-associated MRSA infections, not the community-acquired strain that has been at the center of media attention in recent weeks. However, the Commission is recommending a statewide public information campaign to underscore the importance of handwashing in preventing the spread of MRSA.

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