Swabs collected from hospitalised people found microbes shared with pets at home showing same antibiotic resistance

Healthy dogs and cats could be passing on multidrug-resistant organisms to hospitalised owners. In addition, humans could be transmitting these dangerous microbes to their pets, according to new research to be presented at this weekend’s European Congress of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases in Copenhagen. However, the researchers stressed that the risk of cross-infection is currently low.

The study of more than 2,800 hospital patients and their companion animals was carried out by Dr Carolin Hackmann from Charité University Hospital Berlin, Germany, and colleagues. “Our findings verify that the sharing of multidrug-resistant organisms between companion animals and their owners is possible,” she told the conference.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Forty feared dead as woman rescued from capsized dinghy near Canary Islands

The woman, who was trying to make the trip from Africa, was…

‘We must forget about divisions’: one woman’s journey home 75 years after India’s partition

Chance encounter on Facebook led Reena Verna, 90, to visit family home…

‘Unreal’: Constituents’ fury grows 50 days after Ferrier broke Covid rules

Rutherglen business owners and residents feel frustrated and stranded by MP’s refusal…

How to make much better home pizzas – from flavour-filled bases to next-level toppings

Anyone can make pizza from scratch, but these expert tips will make…