Researchers from Geisinger's Henry Hood Center for Health
Research and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health have for
the first time found an association between living in proximity to
high-density livestock production and community-acquired infections with
methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, commonly known as MRSA.
Their analysis concluded that approximately 11 percent of
community-acquired MRSA and soft tissue infections in the study
population could be attributed to crop fields fertilized with swine
manure. The study is the first to examine the association between
high-density livestock operations and manure-applied crop fields and
MRSA infections in the community. The results were published online
Sept. 16 in JAMA Internal Medicine.
According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, nearly 80 percent
of antibiotics in the United States are sold for use in livestock
feeds. The manure produced by these livestock and applied to crop fields
contains antibiotic-resistant bacteria, resistance genes, and about 75
percent of the antibiotics consumed by the animals.
For the study, researchers utilized Geisinger's sophisticated
electronic health record system to identify patients with MRSA
infections and skin and soft tissue infections. The two groups were
compared to patients who never had a MRSA infection. Patients received
an exposure score based on their distance from the production, the
number of animals at livestock operations, the amount of manure spread
on crop fields, and the size of the field. The researchers noted that
between 2005 and 2010 there were about 3,000 patients with MRSA and
50,000 with skin and soft tissue infections who were diagnosed and
treated in the Geisinger Health System.
Of these cases, 1,539 cases of community-associated MRSA and 1,335
cases of health-care-associated MRSA met the study requirements. The
researchers found a significant association between community-associated
MRSA and application of swine manure to crop fields. A similar but
weaker association was found between swine operations and
community-associated MRSA. No association was found between dairy farms
and MRSA infections.
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