DO NOT USE - ALL INFORMATION LIKELY INCORRECT IF NOT ACTIVELY DANGEROUS
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
RECOGNITION
- Check for IC Alert
- if IC alert not available, check previous 12 months of microbiology reports
- Presumptive or confirmed MRSA report in last 6 months without 3 consecutive clear screens since last MRSA, treat as tagged for MRSA
- All inpatients colonised with MRSA on screening. See Screening for MRSA/SA and MGNB/ESBL/CPE guideline
Emergency admission
- Screen for MRSA on admission and
- if age over 16 years, commence blind MRSA decolonisation (body wash)
- If the patient has any of:
- history of MRSA in previous 6 months
- red MRSA infection prevention alert in IC alert
- transferred from a care home or other hospital
- Immediately after taking samples for MRSA screening, start Initial Management
- if all MRSA screening reports state ‘MRSA not detected’, stop decolonisation immediately
INITIAL MANAGEMENT
Isolation
- If patient has any of:
- exfoliating skin condition
- productive sputum
- extensive wound areas/skin ulcers
- multiple MRSA positive sites
- Nurse in single room
- If patient has none of:
- exfoliating skin condition
- productive sputum
- extensive wound areas/skin ulcers
- multiple MRSA positive sites
- Nurse in single room or cohort nurse with other patients with recent positive MRSA report
Signs of clinical infection
- If patient has a wound or ulcer infected with MRSA (not just colonised), treat infection
- Once infection has improved, move to decolonisation of the patient
Decolonisation
- Once any infection clear, start 5-day decolonisation regimen
- If there is a medical device in situ that breaches skin or mucous membranes (central venous catheter, tracheal cannula, drain, external pacemaker), or a urinary catheter, decolonise while device in situ
- and again, after all devices have been removed
Patient safe not to decolonise
- About to be discharged home
- Unlikely to be re-admitted within 12 months and
- At low risk of aureus (SA) infection
- skin intact, no diabetes
- no malignancy and not on immunosuppressive treatment
Decolonisation regimen
- Nasal mupirocin 2% 8-hrly for 5 days
- For mupirocin-high level resistant MRSA, use chlorhexidine 0.1% with neomycin 0.5% (Naseptin®) nasal cream topically to each nostril 6-hrly for 10 days
- Wash body once daily for 5 days, and hair twice in 5 days
- with chlorhexidine gluconate solution 4% (Hibiscrub®)
- alternative product (e.g. Octenisan®)
- if chlorhexidine gluconate solution 4% not tolerated or patient not self-caring, use octenidine (Octenisan®)
SUBSEQUENT MANAGEMENT
Repeat Screening
Patient safe not to re-screen
- About to be discharged home
- Unlikely to be re-admitted within 12 months and
- At low risk of Staph aureus (SA) infection
- skin intact, no diabetes
- no malignancy and not on immunosuppressive treatment
Patients for re-screening
- After any systemic and/or topical antimicrobial treatment stopped for 48 hr, re-screen
- Screen weekly in MRSA infection high risk areas:
- critical care unit/PICU/SCBU
- burns and plastics
- vascular surgery
- renal unit
- cardiothoracic wards
- orthopaedic wards
- neurosurgical wards
- oncology/haematology wards
Outcome
- If 3 clear screens, patient may come out of single room or cohort
- no longer requires barrier nursing
- do not admit to MRSA-screened ward
- If eradication has failed, do not repeat decolonisation until all indwelling lines/medical devices removed
- Do not attempt to eradicate more than twice during any one admission
Last reviewed: 2023-11-16