Hi, everyone. Apologies for dropping out of sight! As SUPERBUG’s publication draws closer (and it’s very close now), I keep finding new tasks that I have do to. Last week’s was to go to New York to shoot a video for the Simon & Schuster website — and while there, I got caught in Snowpocalypse, got delayed coming home, and picked up a nasty cold. So I’m a bit behind.
But there’s exciting news tonight to start us up again: “pig MRSA,” ST398, causing human infections in Canada and Denmark.
“Infections” is important, because up til now, most evidence for the spread of MRSA ST398 in humans has been through detection of colonization, the symptomless carriage of MRSA on the skin and in the nostrils. The first finding of ST398 in the Netherlands was via colonization; so was its first identification in humans in Canada, and also in the United States just about a year ago.