Scientists Can't Explain How The Clostridium Difficile Superbug Spreads

Superbug Spread

The Huffington Post UK   First Posted: 8/02/2012 16:31 Updated: 8/02/2012 16:31

Only a quarter of hospital-related Clostridium difficile (C.diff) bugs are traced from symptomatic patients who already have the infection, leaving scientists baffled as to how the superbug spreads.

New findings from a research team at John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, contradict existing hospital theories that assume the C.diff bug is spread through contact with infected patients.

Scientists from the study collected stool samples from around 15,000 hospitals and were screened for C.diff toxins.

Of the samples studied, 4.4% came back C.diff positive. Further tests discovered 69 strains of the bacteria but only 23% could be linked to a known infected patient.

Professor Tim Peto, who led the study says: "In this endemic setting with well-implemented infection control measures, up to three quarters of new C.diff infections are not easily explained by conventional assumptions of ward-based transmission from symptomatic patients and so may not be targeted by current interventions."

Professor Peto added that he suspects that instead of encountering C.diff upon entering the hospital, most patients who fell ill with it, carried it with them. Poor health and antibiotic treatment then encourages the bug to grow into the intestines and escalate into an infection.

"You blame the hospital," says Peto. "But that's where you go when you are ill."

Approximately 75% of unexplained transmissions of C.diff could be caused by non-symptomatic carriers, including patients' relatives, staff or through animals or infected food.

Researchers added that there needs to be a better understanding of other routes of infection to reduce the spread of the superbug that affects around 55,000 Brits a year.

The norovirus hit British last year as it suffered double the amount of cases in just two weeks during the peak season, resulting in widespread bed closures in hospitals. Health experts advised that flushing the toilet with the lid down could help prevent the spread of the norovirus.

Symptoms of C.diff infection include diarrhoea and fever.

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  • How To Prevent Catching Illnesses

  • Wash Your Hands

    Wash your hands frequently and thoroughly with soap and water, particularly after using the toilet and before preparing food.

  • Don't Share Flannels Or Towels

    Avoid sharing flannels and towels with anyone who has had or has the superbug, or anyone who may be exposed to it in any way.

  • Disinfect Surfaces

    Disinfect any surfaces or objects that could be contaminated with the virus. Wash the items separately and on a hot wash to ensure that the virus is killed.

  • Keep Your Toilet Clean

    Keep the toilet and surrounding area clean and disinfected to avoid any cross-contamination.

  • Avoid Raw, Unwashed Food

    Avoid eating raw, unwashed produce and only eat oyster from a reliable source. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mobileweb/1969/12/31/three-quarters-british-oysters-norovirus-winter-vomiting-bug_n_1118617.html" target="_hplink">Note that oysters are known to carry the virus.</a>


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Only a quarter of hospital-related Clostridium difficile (C.diff) bugs are traced from symptomatic patients who already have the infection, leaving scientists baffled as to how the superbug spreads. ...
Only a quarter of hospital-related Clostridium difficile (C.diff) bugs are traced from symptomatic patients who already have the infection, leaving scientists baffled as to how the superbug spreads. ...
 
 
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06:18 AM on 02/09/2012
If you are on an aircraft, they must be distributed through the air conditioning, in the old days when smoking was allowed on planes new air was sucked in and the bad air pushed out. IMO.
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Norman Mitchison
01:11 AM on 02/09/2012
If they dont know,then who does? Scientists nil, Superbugs 1.
12:41 AM on 02/09/2012
Well that's the sum total of a wasted university education for you! Anyone with half an ounce of common sense will tell how germs spread.....But they obviously don't teach common sense at uni.
11:21 PM on 02/08/2012
I still say that it's the constant level of temperature and humidity in the hospitals helping to incubate and spread these bugs and viruses.
10:51 PM on 02/08/2012
It comes in on the underneath of shoes when people pick anything up from the floor which has fell to the ground their is the answer .
10:26 PM on 02/08/2012
This article is pure trash. The spread of bacteria has been clearly understood for many years. Trying to create an unknown pathway because you can't say how a specific person was infected by another specific person is worth less that the toilet paper you wipe your bum with
10:22 PM on 02/08/2012
Non symptomatic?
A weasle way of saying'not enough hand cleaning?
Bring back Matron and the idea that a properly cleaned ward and proper cleanliness protocols for staff.

When I went to hospital for diagnosis and treatment of a foot injury ( my little one was a bit overexuberant whilst jumping on my foot), the doctor, with blood from another patient on his gloves, attempted to touch my foot.
I told him to clean up before he touched me,I explained in a very controlled voice that he should use basic hygeine protocols as the nurse with me tried to control her laughter.
Simple cleaning between patients for all medical staff wil cut down cross infection.
Simple!
09:57 PM on 02/08/2012
the hospitals are "over visited" especially at weekends, and peoples hygiene these days is dreadful, there is more bacterial contamination on an ATM key pads, than a public toilet seat, say's everything really.
09:51 PM on 02/08/2012
first of all, don't put your hands on the toilet bowl when your vomitting.
09:06 PM on 02/08/2012
It stands to reason most patients in hospital are not in the best of health and vulnerable to any stray viruses. It must be difficult when people come in from outside bringing all sorts of germs with them, to protect very ill people. Perhaps it should be compulsory for visitors to fit shoe protectors and even wear overalls.
10:28 PM on 02/08/2012
A friend of mine managed to be infected with Hep' some 20+ years ago, when I visited I had to wear a protective smock and have no contact.
Hilarity when I put the smock on the wrong way round but no access until I put it on the correct way.
Now you can sit there with no barrier and no supervision to stop contact.
Such an improvement.