Prevention and Control of Postoperative Wound Infections Owing toStaphylococcus aureus
- 25 October 1956
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 255 (17) , 787-794
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm195610252551701
Abstract
ATTENTION was called in a previous paper1 to the increasing number of antibiotic-resistant strains of Staphylococcus aureus, or Micrococcus pyogenes (var. aureus), being recovered from hospital patients and personnel since the introduction of penicillin. Data were presented showing that the postoperative infection rate of clean wounds had increased over a five-year period (1949–1953) at the Massachusetts Memorial Hospitals despite the use of prophylactic antibiotics. Analysis of the hospital carrier rate and the floras of infected wounds at that time suggested that the increase in sepsis was related to an abnormally high carrier rate of penicillin-resistant Staph. aureus as . . .Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE HOSPITAL STAPHYLOCOCCUSThe Lancet, 1956
- Emergence of Antibiotic-Resistant BacteriaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1955
- CONTROL OF WOUND INFECTION IN A THORACIC SURGERY UNITThe Lancet, 1955
- MICROBIAL RESISTANCE TO ANTIBIOTICSAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1955
- Postoperative Wound Infections Due toStaphylococcus aureusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1954
- HOSPITAL CROSS-INFECTIONS WITH STAPHYLOCOCCI RESISTANT TO SEVERAL ANTIBIOTICSThe Lancet, 1952
- PENICILLIN-RESISTANT STAPHYLOCOCCAL INFECTION IN A MATERNITY HOSPITALThe Lancet, 1949
- AIR INFECTION WITH DUST LIBERATED FROM CLOTHINGThe Lancet, 1948
- The carriage of Staphylococcus (ptogenes) aureus in man and its relation to wound infectionThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1944
- CONTROL OF STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS IN AN OPERATING-THEATREThe Lancet, 1939