“…Other risk factors for MRSA infections include prolonged hospitalization, overcrowding and understaffing in neonatal wards, long-term use of respiratory support, intravascular catheters, antibiotics, and total parenteral nutrition, as well as surgical procedures [6, 18, 19]. The clinical manifestation of MRSA infections may range from mild focal infections, such as conjunctivitis and skin and soft tissue infections, to more severe forms like toxic shock syndrome [24] and even invasive infections such as sepsis, necrotizing pneumonia, meningitis, endocarditis, osteomyelitis, liver abscesses, and urinary tract infections [2, 18, 23, 25-27]. Sepsis, especially late-onset sepsis, is currently the most common manifestation of invasive MRSA infections, with one third of cases presenting as MRSA sepsis [2, 25].…”