1949
DOI: 10.1017/s0022172400014492
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The source of infection in Pemphigus neonatorum

Abstract: An outbreak of eighteen cases of pemphigus neonatorum in a maternity department is described.Strains ofStaph. aureusisolated from the infants, the mothers and the staff during several weeks of intensive investigations were classified by phage typing.The findings indicated that, during the latter part of the outbreak at least, the adults were not the source of infection.There was evidence of wide dissemination of the epidemic strain ofStaph. aureusamong the healthy infants in the nursery. It is suggested that t… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 12 publications
(10 reference statements)
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“…Our experience agrees with that of other workers (Allison & Hobbs, 1947;Cunliffe, 1949;Parker & Kennedy, 1949) that there is little or no evidence of transmission of nasal staphylococci from mother to infant in hospital. A mother may become infected with resistant strains independently in hospital but mothers swabbed in hospital C had a low incidence of resistant strains.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Our experience agrees with that of other workers (Allison & Hobbs, 1947;Cunliffe, 1949;Parker & Kennedy, 1949) that there is little or no evidence of transmission of nasal staphylococci from mother to infant in hospital. A mother may become infected with resistant strains independently in hospital but mothers swabbed in hospital C had a low incidence of resistant strains.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…The coagulase-positive staphylococcal carriage rates for mothers' nasal swabs of 28.7% (first day) and 30.7% (eighth ,day) obtained in this series compare with the rates of 21% given by Torrey and Reese (1945), 28% by Parker and Kennedy (1949), 42.6% by Rountree and Barbour (1950), -and 36% by Ludlam (1953). No significant increase 'occurred either in the carriage rate or the penicillinresistance rate of staphylococci isolated from the nose between the first and eighth days of the mothers' stay in 'hospital.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 50%
“…The mean sulphonamide resistance percentage for all swabs was 16.8%, although in the case of hospital M babies the rate was as high as 38.3%. Duncan and Walker (1942), Allison and Hobbs (1947), Parker and Kennedy (1949), Barber et al (1949), and other authors, using serological and phage-typing methods, have shown that infection is usually conveyed in hospital maternity units from baby to baby, from staff to baby, or from blankets, dust, etc., to baby. This is bome out by the present investigation, since drug-resistance patterns showed a considerable degree of uniformity among staphylococci from babies and staff, but no such uniformity between babies and staff on the one hand and mothers on the other.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here it is immaterial which phages are used to distinguish between cultures from related sources. It has been most useful in some epidemiological investigations (Parker & Kennedy, 1949;Sompolinsky, Hermann, Oeding & Rippon, 1957). From this type of investigation, it became clear that strains of particular importance appeared, and it was desirable to gain information of their distribution within and between countries.…”
Section: Results Of Typing With Human Phagesmentioning
confidence: 99%