WhatFinger

Resistant bacteria are soon to meet their match: a genetically engineered fluid that restores their susceptibility to antibiotics.

New ‘solution’ kills hospital superbugs


By News on the Net ——--December 29, 2011

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By Karin Kloosterman, Israel 21 News Every patient, nurse, doctor and visitor to a hospital knows the drill: hands get a splash of antibacterial fluid found at every bedside, entrance and exit. Keeping hands clean can prevent some infections, but superbugs -- those sometimes deadly bacterial strains resistant to antibiotics -- can outwit the best hygiene practices.

Hospital-acquired infections are one of the leading causes of preventable death in the developed world today, with 100,000 people in the United States alone dying every year from bugs they catch as patients in the hospital, according to the World Health Organization. The old and very young are at an especially high risk of infection from resistant bacteria that can spread like wildfire. But now superbugs may have met their match, thanks to a genetically engineered cleaning solution developed in Israeli laboratories.

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