Isolation of Staphylococcus spp. from hospital wastewater and adjacent community household water: Special focus on their antibiotic resistance
Abstract
Staphylococcus spp. is a leading cause of human bacterial infections. These infections can
damage the skin, soft tissues, bones, circulation, and respiratory system. It has the unusual
capacity to rapidly develop resistance to any antibiotic deployed against it. Antibiotic-resistant S.
aureus strains are rising at an alarming rate, which not only limits treatment options but also
makes it impossible to calculate the economic deprivation caused by this superbug. In this
research, the antimicrobial resistance patterns of Staphylococcus spp. isolated from hospital
wastewater and community household water samples were investigated for 15 different
antibiotics. The antibiotic resistance pattern of these Staphylococcus spp. isolates was
determined using the disc diffusion method. Staphylococcus spp. was particularly resistant to
antibiotics in the penicillin category, such as Penicillin-G, Oxacillin, and Methicillin. 60%
isolates of hospital wastewater sample were resistant to both penicillin-G and methicillin &
100% isolates of community household water were resistant to penicillin-G and methicillin;
100% isolates of both hospital and community were resistant towards oxacillin. 40% isolates of
hospital wastewater were resistant to Tetracycline. 100% isolates of hospital wastewater showed
resistance towards the antibiotic Ceftazidime which belong to the group cephalosporins and 60%
isolates of community water were resistant to Ceftazidime. 20% isolates of hospital wastewater
and 25% isolates of community water were resistant to the antibiotic Erythromycin of the
macrolides group. Since Staphylococcus spp. samples were resistant to more than one class of
antibiotics, it can be concluded that they exhibited multidrug resistance.