Los Angeles Times

Snooping around in hospital pipes, scientists find DNA that fuels the spread of superbugs

The pipes carrying away the effluvia of very sick people are bound to be nasty, dirty places.

But just how unwholesome they are is made clear in a new report showing that the pipes beneath a hospital intensive care unit are a throbbing, seething hook-up zone for antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

Even when the sinks, faucets, bedrails and countertops of patients' rooms are largely free of germs that resist modern medicines, the genetic building blocks for antibiotic resistance intermingle freely in the pipes connected to those rooms, according to a study published Tuesday in

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times3 min readCrime & Violence
'He Didn't Deserve To Die': Family Says Man Shot By Police In California Was Mentally Ill, Unarmed
DOWNEY, Calif. — A mentally ill man was fatally shot Saturday by Downey police in his backyard after a neighbor called the police on him for lighting fireworks, his family said. The Downey Police Department said it was responding to a call about a "d
Los Angeles Times3 min read
James Paxton Gives Up 12 Hits And Nine Runs In Dodgers’ Blowout Loss To Giants
SAN FRANCISCO — The “opener” in what was supposed to be a “bullpen game” for the San Francisco Giants outlasted the Los Angeles Dodgers’ starter, which should provide a hint at how things went for the visiting team on a sun-splashed Sunday afternoon
Los Angeles Times4 min read
One Of Earth’s Oldest Known Plants Takes Center Stage In California Development Battle
JURUPA VALLEY, Calif. — After a contentious five-hour public meeting, environmentalists advocates have persuaded Inland Empire officials to delay development of a project within 400 feet of one of the oldest known plants in the state and the third-ol

Related Books & Audiobooks