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Apex Nursing

Reference — Infection Control

Multidrug-Resistant Organisms (MDROs)

MDROs are bacteria that have developed resistance to multiple antibiotic classes, severely limiting treatment options. Nursing practice is central to MDRO prevention through consistent application of contact precautions, hand hygiene, and antibiotic stewardship advocacy.

Educational use only. Treatment options for MDROs evolve rapidly. Always consult current susceptibility testing, infectious disease specialists, and facility antibiogram data when guiding antibiotic therapy. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Quick Reference

OrganismPrecautionsHand HygieneKey Feature
MRSAContactABHR or soap + waterSkin/wound colonization
VREContactABHR or soap + waterSurvives on surfaces weeks–months
ESBLContactABHR or soap + waterESBL enzyme inactivates β-lactams
CREContactABHR or soap + waterVery limited treatment options
C. difficileContactSoap + water onlySpores — alcohol-resistant

MRSAMethicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus

Transmission

Direct contact with skin, wounds, or drainage; indirect contact with contaminated surfaces and equipment

Precautions

Contact precautions

Required PPE

Gloves and gown on room entry; hand hygiene with ABHR (soap and water acceptable)

Room

Private room preferred; cohort with same organism if unavailable

Treatment Overview

Vancomycin (first-line for systemic infection); linezolid, daptomycin for alternatives

Decolonization

Nasal mupirocin ointment × 5 days; chlorhexidine gluconate bathing; screen and treat close contacts (surgical patients, ICU admissions at many facilities)

Nursing Considerations

  • Screen high-risk patients per facility protocol (nasal swabs, wound cultures)
  • Dedicated patient equipment — stethoscope, BP cuff, thermometer
  • Clean and disinfect high-touch surfaces in room daily
  • Educate patient and family on hand hygiene, not sharing items, wound care
  • Positive MRSA screen does not mean active infection — colonization is different from infection

VREVancomycin-Resistant Enterococcus

Transmission

Direct contact; indirect contact through contaminated environmental surfaces — VRE can survive on surfaces for weeks

Precautions

Contact precautions

Required PPE

Gloves and gown on room entry; hand hygiene with ABHR

Room

Private room; dedicated equipment; environmental cleaning critical due to surface survival

Treatment Overview

Linezolid or daptomycin (vancomycin is ineffective by definition); treatment options are limited

Decolonization

No established decolonization protocol; eradication from the GI tract is difficult

Nursing Considerations

  • VRE can persist on dry surfaces for months — thorough environmental cleaning is essential
  • Antibiotic stewardship is critical — overuse of vancomycin selects for VRE
  • High-risk patients: prolonged hospitalization, prior antibiotics, immunocompromise, renal disease, liver transplant
  • Screen high-risk patients per protocol (rectal swabs)
  • Educate on hand hygiene importance for patients, families, and visitors

ESBLExtended-Spectrum Beta-Lactamase-Producing Organisms

Transmission

Direct contact; fecal-oral route; contaminated surfaces; healthcare environment

Precautions

Contact precautions

Required PPE

Gloves and gown on room entry; hand hygiene with ABHR

Room

Private room preferred; cohort if unavailable

Treatment Overview

Carbapenems (imipenem, meropenem, ertapenem) for serious infections; fosfomycin for uncomplicated UTI

Decolonization

No standard decolonization protocol

Nursing Considerations

  • ESBL producers include E. coli and Klebsiella — most common sources are UTIs and wounds
  • Community-acquired ESBL infections are increasing — not exclusively hospital-associated
  • Many ESBL strains are also resistant to fluoroquinolones and aminoglycosides
  • Culture and sensitivity results are critical — do not assume coverage without susceptibility testing
  • Antibiotic stewardship and hand hygiene are primary prevention strategies

CRECarbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae

Transmission

Direct contact; fecal-oral route; contaminated surfaces and healthcare equipment

Precautions

Contact precautions; some facilities use enhanced contact (gown and gloves for any room entry even without direct contact)

Required PPE

Gloves and gown on room entry; hand hygiene with ABHR

Room

Private room required; some facilities require enhanced environmental cleaning protocols

Treatment Overview

Ceftazidime-avibactam, meropenem-vaborbactam, imipenem-cilastatin-relebactam — options are limited and treatment must be guided by susceptibility; consult infectious disease

Decolonization

No established decolonization protocol

Nursing Considerations

  • CRE (particularly KPC — Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase) are among the most dangerous MDROs — few treatment options remain
  • Report confirmed CRE to infection control immediately per facility protocol
  • Screen high-risk patients (recent healthcare outside the US, prior MDRO history)
  • Strict environmental cleaning — CRE can survive on surfaces for extended periods
  • Invasive devices (urinary catheters, central lines) are major risk factors — remove as soon as possible

C. difficileClostridioides difficile (formerly Clostridium difficile)

Transmission

Fecal-oral route; spores survive on surfaces for months; transmitted by contaminated hands and environments

Precautions

Contact precautions

Required PPE

Gloves and gown on room entry; SOAP AND WATER (not ABHR) — alcohol does not kill spores

Room

Private room with private bathroom if possible; dedicated equipment; enhanced environmental cleaning with sporicidal agents (10% bleach solution)

Treatment Overview

Fidaxomicin (preferred) or oral vancomycin (acceptable alternative) for an initial episode; bezlotoxumab for recurrence prevention; fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) for recurrent CDI

Decolonization

No decolonization; focus on antibiotic stewardship to allow normal flora recovery

Nursing Considerations

  • CRITICAL: Hand hygiene must use soap and water — ABHR is NOT effective against C. diff spores
  • Environmental cleaning requires sporicidal agents (bleach-based) — standard disinfectants do not kill spores
  • Antibiotic use is the #1 risk factor — any antibiotic can trigger CDI, especially clindamycin, fluoroquinolones, and cephalosporins
  • Symptoms: watery diarrhea (≥3 loose stools in 24 hours), cramping, low-grade fever
  • Send only liquid stool for C. diff testing — formed stool is not appropriate
  • Discontinue offending antibiotic when possible
  • Maintain contact precautions for the duration of the hospital stay regardless of symptom resolution

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with CDC / HICPAC · Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) / SHEA. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →