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MRSA Infection Center - Pensacola, FL

Pensacola Infectious Disease Specialist Doctors for MRSA Infection

Type of Physician: Infectious Disease Specialist

What is a Infectious Disease Specialist?

A subspecialty certification by the Board of Internal Medicine; practitioners deal with infectious diseases of all types and in all organs. AIDS patients and patients with fevers of unknown origin are often diagnosed and treated by these subspecialists. They are also experts in preventive medicine and medical conditions associated with travel.

Specialty: Infectious Disease

Common Name:

Infectious Disease Specialist Doctors in Pensacola *

Infectious Disease Group PA
James Sidney Clements
1717 North E St
Professional Bldg STE 439
Pensacola, FL 32501
(850) 432-3692

Infectious Disease Group PA
David A Daley
1717 North E St
Professional Bldg STE 439
Pensacola, FL 32501
(850) 432-3692

Infectious Disease Group PA
Jay R Erickson
1717 North E St
Professional Bldg STE 439
Pensacola, FL 32501
(850) 432-3692

Center For Prevention & Treatment of Infections
Issa E Ephtimios
5153 N 9th Ave
Ste 305 STE 305
Pensacola, FL 32504
(850) 476-3131

Center For Prevention & Treatment of Infections
Edgardo E Li-Espino
5153 N 9th Ave
Ste 305 STE 305
Pensacola, FL 32504
(850) 476-3131

Center For Prevention & Treatment of Infections
Barbara H Wade
5153 N 9th Ave
Ste 305 STE 305
Pensacola, FL 32504
(850) 476-3131

Medical Center Clinic
Jesse P Penico
8333 N Davis Hwy
Infectious Disease FL FL 9
Pensacola, FL 32514
(850) 474-8187

Medical Center Clinic
Kevin Allen Swartz
8333 N Davis Hwy
Infectious Disease FL FL 9
Pensacola, FL 32514
(850) 474-8187

Pensacola, Florida

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MRSA

What is methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)?

MRSA stands for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) bacteria. This organism is known for causing skin infections in addition to many other types of infections. There are other designations in the scientific literature for these bacteria according to where the bacteria are acquired by patients, such as community-acquired MRSA (CA-MRSA or CMRSA), hospital-acquired or health-care-acquired MRSA (HA-MRSA or HMRSA), or epidemic MRSA (EMRSA). Statistical data suggest that as many as 19,000 people per year die from MRSA in the U.S.; current data suggest this number has declined by about 25%-35% in recent years, in part, because of prevention practices at hospitals and home care.

Although S. aureus has been causing infections (Staph infections) probably as long as the human race has existed, MRSA has a relatively short history. MRSA was first noted in 1961, about two years after the antibiotic methicillin was initially used to treat S. aureus and other infectious bacteria. The resistance to methicillin was due to a penicillin-binding protein coded for by a mobile genetic element termed the methicillin-resistant gene (mecA). In recent years, the gene has continued to evolve so that many MRSA strains are currently resistant to several different antibiotics such as penicillin, oxacillin, and amoxicillin (Amoxil, Dispermox, Trimox). HA-MRSA are often also resistant to tetracycline (Sumycin), erythromycin (E-Mycin, Eryc, Ery-Tab, PCE, Pediazole, Ilosone), and clindamycin (Cleocin). In 2009, research showed that many antibiotic-resistant genes and toxins are bundled and transferred together to other bacteria, which speed the development of toxic and resistant strains of MRSA. S. aureus is sometimes termed a "superbug" because of their ability to be resistant to several antibiotics.

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Recommended Reading Related to MRSA

Antibiotic Resistance (Drug Resistance, Antimicrobial Resistance) »

Quick facts about drug resistance

  • Many infectious diseases are increasingly difficult to treat because of antimicrobial-resistant organisms, including HIV infection, staphylococcal infection, tuberculosis, influenza, gonorrhea, candida infection, and malaria.
  • Between 5 and 10 percent of all hospital patients develop an infection. About 90,000 of these patients die each year as a result of their infection, up from 13,300 patient deaths in 1992.
  • According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (April 2011), antibiotic resistance in the United States costs an estimated $20 billion a year in excess health care costs, $35 million in other societal costs and more than 8 million additional days that people spend in the hospital.
  • People infected with antimicrobial-resistant organisms are more likely to have longer hospital stays and may require more complicated treatment.

D...

Emergency Contact for Pensacola

  • In case of Emergency, call 911

Nearby Pensacola Hospitals *

Baptist Hospital
1000 W Moreno St
Pensacola, FL 32501
(850)434-4011

Lakeview Center
1221 W Lakeview Ave
Pensacola, FL 32501
(850)432-1222

Sacred Heart Health System
5151 N 9th Ave
Pensacola, FL 32504
(850)416-7000

Gulf Breeze Hospital
1110 Gulf Breeze Pkwy
Gulf Breeze, FL 32561
(850)934-2000

West Florida Hospital
8383 N Davis Hwy
Pensacola, FL 32514
(850)494-4000

West Florida Rehabilitation Institute
8391 N Davis Hwy
Pensacola, FL 32514
(850)494-6000

Santa Rosa Medical Center
6002 Berryhill Rd
Milton, FL 32570
(850)626-7762

West Florida Community Care Center
5500 Stewart St
Milton, FL 32570
(850)983-5500

South Baldwin Regional Medical Center
1613 North McKenzie St
Foley, AL 36535
(251)949-3400

Fort Walton Beach Medical Center
1000 Mar Walt Dr
Fort Walton Beach, FL 32547
(850)862-1111

Gulf Coast Treatment Center
1015 Mar Walt Dr
Fort Walton Beach, FL 32547
(850)863-4160

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