MRSA infection
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/mrsa/DS00735/DSECTION=3

Causes
Although the survival tactics of bacteria contribute to antibiotic resistance,
humans bear most of the responsibility for the problem. Leading causes of 
antibiotic
resistance include:

Unnecessary antibiotic use in humans. Like other superbugs, MRSA is the result 
of
decades of excessive and unnecessary antibiotic use. For years, antibiotics have
been prescribed for colds, flu and other viral infections that don't respond to
these drugs, as well as for simple bacterial infections that normally clear on 
their
own.
Antibiotics in food and water. Prescription drugs aren't the only source of
antibiotics. In the United States, antibiotics can be found in beef cattle, 
pigs and
chickens. The same antibiotics then find their way into municipal water systems 
when
the runoff from feedlots contaminates streams and groundwater. Routine feeding 
of
antibiotics to animals is banned in the European Union and many other 
industrialized
countries. Antibiotics given in the proper doses to animals who are sick don't
appear to produce resistant bacteria.
Germ mutation. Even when antibiotics are used appropriately, they contribute to 
the
rise of drug-resistant bacteria because they don't destroy every germ they 
target.
Bacteria live on an evolutionary fast track, so germs that survive treatment 
with
one antibiotic soon learn to resist others. And because bacteria mutate much 
more
quickly than new drugs can be produced, some germs end up resistant to just 
about
everything. That's why only a handful of drugs are now effective against most 
forms
of staph.


KK

Remember: life is like a roll of toilet paper. 
The closer it gets to the end, the faster it goes...

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