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Rates of infections caused by antibiotic-resistant bugs known as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, are on the decline, according to an analysis published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Here is some information about MRSA infection: • It is a type of "staph" infection that does not respond to the antibiotics typically used to treat such infections • A wound infected with MRSA looks much like any other wound: red, inflamed, swollen, and painful, with pus or other fluids draining from it • The only way to confirm that an infection is indeed caused by MRSA is a test a sample in a laboratory Researchers from the San Antonio Military Medical Center used medical records on the more than 9.2 million men and women from all ages across the U.S. who are eligible for Department of Defense TRICARE benefits to track changes in rates of first-time MRSA infections between 2005 and 2010. Rates of MRSA infections, both those that started in the community and those that started in hospital declined from 2005 to 2010. At the same time, the proportion of skin and soft tissue infections that were caused by MRSA, as opposed to a type of staph that is not antibiotic-resistant, declined from 62% in 2006 to 52% in 2010. Today's research adds to mounting evidence that broad shifts in how MRSA is affecting human health are afoot. Additional research is needed to determine whether these changes will continue and to identify which factors are contributing most to them.