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Four babies contracted superbug 10.10.08

THE HSE has confirmed that three babies tested positive for the MRSA superbug at Letterkenny General Hospital over the past two weeks. It has since emerged that another baby, born at the hospital four months ago, tested positive for the superbug the day after being released.
“The hospital has informed the families and GPs of the babies concerned, and the infection control nurses and public health nurses are in contact with them and will provide any advice and information they need,” the HSE said in a statement.
MRSA is an antibiotic-resistant superbug that can be fatal if it gets into the bloodstream. As the HSE does not comment on individual cases, it is not known whether the babies concerned had the infection on their skin or bloodstreams.
The mother of the four-month
Letterkenny General Hospital
old baby who also tested positive for MRSA the day after his discharge has also been speaking about their ordeal.
She told the Irish Independent's Anita Guidera she knew something was wrong when she took her newborn home.
"I noticed a bad smell coming from his tummy button and it didn't look like it was healing," she recalled. She took her baby son back to the hospital where the wound was swabbed and tested. The following day she was contacted by her GP who confirmed the MRSA infection which then spread to the baby's eye, nose, throat and groin. "I was gutted and didn't know where to turn. I didn't know a baby could get MRSA," she said, complaining she had been left in the dark about what to do. Around eight weeks later, the hospital's Infection Control unit gave her guidelines such as how to bathe her infant. Meanwhile, the Donegal branch of the MRSA and Families Network has asked what preventative measures were put in place following the diagnosis of MRSA in the baby during the summer. The hospital's consultant microbiologist, Dr Michael Mulherin, said staff had followed best practice guidelines on dealing with MRSA.
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