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School Sports Teams and MRSA

How to Educate Your Child About MRSA

By Peter Stone, published Oct 13, 2008
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An eighteen year old Florida football player died the last week in September with a diagnosis of MRSA. He was a starting linebacker. A second case was diagnosed at the same high school from a fellow team member. MRSA is methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus, staph bacteria that can cause a skin infection, which in rare cases can be deadly. MRSA is a common skin infection. However, it can sometimes be very resistant to antibiotics.

There is a National MRSA Education Initiative to educate the public on this disease and preventive measures. MRSA can be transmitted by direct contact with a person infected with the skin disease. MRSA is also transmitted by sharing personal unclean items such as towels in a locker room, uniforms, or razors which have touched infected skin. Teens and children often times share these items after play sports or physical activity. MRSA is reported in high physical contact sports such as wrestling, football, and rugby. It is also reported in players of other sports like soccer, basketball, field hockey, volleyball, rowing, martial arts, fencing, and baseball. Any skin contact can lead to MRSA. Basically, some settings have factors that make it easier for MRSA to be transmitted: Crowding, frequent skin-to-skin Contact, Compromised skin (i.e., cuts or abrasions), Contaminated items and surfaces, and lack of Cleanliness. Place where transmissions are common include schools, dormitories, military barracks, households, correctional facilities, and daycare centers. Teachers, coaches, and athletics directors who observe children with open draining wounds or infections should refer the child to the school nurse. Enforce hand hygiene with soap and water or alcohol-based hand sanitizers (if available) before eating and after using the bathroom.

Kids participating in any organized or recreational activities should be aware of the symptoms. Most staph skin infections, including MRSA, appear as a bump or infected area on the skin that may be: red, swollen, painful, warm to the touch, full of pus or other drainage, and accompanied by a fever.

School Sports Teams and MRSA

Girls Football Team

Credit: borough-council@highpeak.gov.uk

Copyright: http://www.highpeak.gov.uk/news/press/images/GirlsFootball.jpg

Takeaways
  • A presenting chief complaint of "spider bite" should raise suspicion of a S. aureus infection.
  • Consult with your school about its policy for notification of skin infections.
  • Exclusion from school and sports activities should be reserved for those with wound drainage ("pus")
Did You Know?
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has emerged in the community with clinical, epidemiologic, and bacteriologic characteristics different from healthcare-associated MRSA (HA-MRSA).
Comments
Comments 1 - 2 of 2
 
 
Thanks, I hope the info gets out.

Posted on 10/21/2008 at 7:10:47 AM

 
MRSA is such a worry. This is good information, Peter. Sophie

Posted on 10/20/2008 at 10:10:36 AM

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