Spider bite leads to dangerous infection

PORT ANGELES — What seemed like a minor spider bite almost turned deadly for a Port Angeles plumber.

The Peninsula Daily News reports that Joel Roberson was working on a plumbing job in May when a tiny spider bit him. A few days later, his leg had swollen to twice its size, then fevers set in. Doctors gave him antibiotics, and he improved, but he soon developed a full-body skin rash.

“One day it would be a little bit better, and so we would put off going to the doctor for another day,” said his wife, Sandi Roberson.

The bite had let in Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus — commonly known as MRSA.

“They told me that I had to have surgery, that I could die from this,” Roberson said.

MRSA is a common virus — one in six people has it on his or her body — but if it gets in the bloodstream through a cut or an opening, it is extremely resistant to antibiotics and can be fatal, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.

“Apparently, there is only one antibiotic that really works well on MRSA, and it wasn’t the one he was on,” said Roberson’s sister, Carrie Bennett.

Roberson had to undergo surgery to stave off the damage to his body. Doctors cut a 5-inch-long incision to remove infected areas of skin and tissue.

For six days, he had to live in isolation because MRSA is extremely contagious, he said.

He is now recovering, but before the bite he had canceled his medical insurance and now faces debt.

“The premiums just went up to where we couldn’t afford them anymore,” Sandi Roberson said.

Ideally, he would be recovering with the aid of a machine called a “wound vac” to help close the incision, but Roberson says that because he doesn’t have insurance, he couldn’t get the machine.

The family has accrued $20,000 of debt already.

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