A new study reveals that bacteria associated with staph infections can hitch a ride in workers’ noses. Dina Fine Maron reports. Sep 16, 2014
Careful what you sniff. Especially if you work at an industrial hog farm. Because a small study finds that drug-resistant bacteria may hang out in the noses of some workers even after four days away from work following exposure. Almost half of the tested workers continued to harbor drug-resistant bacteria two weeks after their initial exposure, perhaps due to re-exposures on the job.
The unwelcome stowaways include so-called “superbug” MRSA, as well as other bacteria associated with an increased risk of staph infections. The research is in the journal . [Maya Nadimpalli et al.: ]
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