Page content: Victorian statutory requirement | Infectious agent | Identification | Incubation period | Public health significance & occurrence | Reservoir | Mode of transmission | Period of communicability | Susceptibility & resistance | Control measures | Outbreak measures
Notification is not required.
School exclusion: for impetigo due to staphylococcal infection exclude until appropriate treatment has commenced.
There are nineteen species of staphylococci. The most significant human pathogens are Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis. Methicillin resistant S. aureus (MRSA) and vancomycin-resistant S. aureus (h-VISA, VISA and VRSA) are significant pathogens in hospital-acquired disease. Virulence varies greatly amongst the bacterial strains.
Clinical features
Staphylococcal infection presents with a variety of different clinical and epidemiological patterns amongst the general community, newborns, hospitalised patients and menstruating women. It may cause:
Method of diagnosis
Diagnosis is confirmed by isolation of the organism from relevant specimens. Their antibiotic resistance profile is important in management.
The incubation period is variable and indefinite. It is most commonly four to ten days.
Staphylococcal infections are frequent but are usually contained by immune mechanisms to the site of entry. Approximately 20–30% of the population are colonised with S. aureus in the anterior nasal passages. The highest incidence of disease usually occurs in people with poor personal hygiene, overcrowding and in children. However anyone can develop a serious staphylococcal infection including fit young people.
Since the late 1970s MRSA strains have been identified in Victoria as a major cause of nosocomial infections and outbreaks. MRSA accounts for approximately 30–50% of hospital-acquired S. aureus isolated from normally sterile sites. Vancomycin resistant strains have been reported. Health care employees and other carers may develop intermittent colonisation with MRSA. These workers rarely develop infection.
Human carriers are a major source of infection. Staphylococci have prolonged survival in the hospital environment due to resistance to antiseptics and disinfectants.
Staphylococci are most often transmitted by direct or indirect contact with a person who has a discharging would, a clinical infection of the respiratory or urinary tract, or one who is colonised with the organism. MRSA can be carried on the hands of healthcare personnel and is a likely mode of transmission between patients and staff. Contaminated surfaces and medical equipment are also possible sources of MRSA.
Communicability exists as long as purulent lesions continue to drain, or the carrier state persists.
People who are most susceptible to infection are the chronically ill and newborns.
Mechanisms of immunity are not well understood. An experimental vaccine with a short duration of immunity has been developed to assist patients with end-stage renal disease.
Resistance to penicillin-related antibiotics in the hospital setting is common and includes MRSA. Two specific types of vancomycin antimicrobial resistant S. aureus called VISA and VRSA have recently emerged.
Preventive measures
General measures:
In the health care setting:
Control of case
Advise isolation until treatment of the infection has commenced. Search for and cover draining lesions. Infected persons should avoid contact with infants and chronically ill patients. Added infection control precautions may be recommended for cases with infections due to multi-resistant organisms.
Control of contacts
Routine contact tracing is not usually required.
Determining the carrier status amongst family members of a pathogenic strain may be occasionally useful, in which carriers might be recommended antibiotics to eliminate the bacteria such as mupirocin.
Control of environment
Encourage hand washing, especially in the hospital setting.
The Department of Human Services may investigate unusual clusters of staphylococcal infection in the community, particularly those associated with antibiotic resistant strains.
This may include:
Special settings
Hospital nursery workers with minor lesions such as boils or abscesses should not have direct contact with infants until the lesion has healed.
All known or suspected cases in a nursery should be isolated.
In school settings, the child should be excluded from school until specific treatment begins. Lesions must be covered with a watertight dressing. Contacts do not need to be excluded.
Last updated: 20 April, 2009
This web site is managed and authorised by Communicable Disease Control,
Public Health Branch,
Rural & Regional Health & Aged Care Services Division of the
Victorian State Government, Department of Health, Australia
