Replied by Ted (Bangkok, Thailand)
Dear Marcie: I am assuming MRSA is methicillin resistant staphyloccocus aureus. This staphyloccus is a well known to be acid resistant. This includes glutaldehydes, formaldehyde, bleach (yes they are acid), and many other common antiseptics. I also suspect that the Norwalk viruses found in many cruise ships is acid resistant, which is why they are having problems controlling them - of course this uses another formula altogether.
More than 99% of all antiseptics in U.S. including hospitals (I think they did it intentionally) are really acid in nature. To be honest with you, I too was stupid enough to use this also. And for some reason or another a large majority of all antiseptic aromatherapy oils are also acid in nature. This includes Earth Clinic's popular remedy apple cider vinegar! ACV IS NOT going to work in killing any MRSA!
The best form of antibiotic/antiseptic is actually an alkaline form of medicine and antiseptic. It has worked very well with me. The problem is that this little bug is acid resistant and bleach does not have a lasting effect in killing them.
The solution is really simple, their weakness is alkaline.
You need to prepare an alkaline antiseptic, the ones I personally use is a potassium carbonate, whose alkalinity is fairly mild and sometimes they add this in supplements such as microhydrin. I will give you three possible formulas for you to try over. They all should work very well, but due to budget constraints prevents me to know which ones worked the best:
1. Simple 20% potassium carbonate solution used as cleaning and killing off MRSA.
2. For baths (of children) a weaker form perhaps a 10% potassium carbonate is used.
3. More advanced formulation in killing it is to add sea salt 5%-10% plus 15% potassium carbonate solution.
4. If you are desperate enough an even more powerful one is, of course, is a 1% H2O2 solution, plus 15% potassium carbonate, plus 5% sea salt.
I live in Bangkok and I may have a far different strains of MRSA then you, but I imagine generally that staphyloccus are acid resistant (with weakness in alkalinity), and if it works for you or they don't work, please give me a feedback. As I have many OTHER more powerful formulas I have under my sleeves.
If I give you anymore suggestions, it may just confuse you. Just see how the above works and if you have any problems, I would be most happy to provide you with more solutions. If the above doesn't seem to work (they should disappear miraculously ALMOST overnight), then your problem may have to do with the nanoinsects. In that case, adding borax to the formula should solve the other problems. Of course there are other causes such as mycoplasma, fungus, etc., requiring different formulas, but these are the main issues.