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MRSA Information

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There has been a lot in the press lately about a skin infection called MRSA becoming more prevalent in contact sports. Below is a compilation of information about MRSA, most of which comes from aWebMD article written by Daniel J. DeNoon.

 

Where in your community can you find the drug-resistant staph germs known as MRSA ? The surprising answer: They're closer than you may think.

With all the buzz about MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus), it's easy to forget there really are two MRSA epidemics going on at the same time.

By far the largest epidemic is going on inside hospitals and other health care facilities. The staph bug causing these infections resists treatment with a broad range of antibiotics. Because it attacks so many people with weakened immune systems, hospital-acquired MRSA (HA-MRSA) accounts for the vast majority of fatal MRSA infections.

But another, unrelated strain of MRSA is circulating in communities across the U.S. This strain is resistant to first-line antibiotics and is called community-acquired MRSA (CA-MRSA).

News that MRSA is now killing at least 19,000 Americans each year has focused public attention on community-acquired MRSA. Where does it lurk? WebMD asked epidemiologist Jeff Hageman, one of the scientists tracking MRSA at the CDC.

"We see outbreaks in settings where there is crowding, a lot of skin contact, and, often, a lack of good hygiene," Hageman tells WebMD.

Hot spots for these outbreaks have been:

  • Athletic settings
  • Military barracks
  • Prisons
  • Schools

Interestingly, Hageman says day care centers have not been hot spots for MSRA outbreaks.

"It is kind of surprising to us that we have not received many reports of MRSA in day care," he says. "We hear lots of reports of MRSA in children, but not associated with day care. One reason is that day care centers already have policies in place to handle a wide variety of diseases. Those same policies would prevent MRSA infections."

Hageman says outbreaks happen when a person with an MRSA infection comes into direct skin-to-skin contact with another person -- or after a person uses a towel or other object that's been contaminated by an infected person.

But you can't avoid MRSA by avoiding so-called hot spots.

"Staph is found anywhere. One in three people carry staph on their skin. They can spread infections anywhere in the community," Hageman says.

 

The Main Hot Spot for MRSA

Why do so many people carry staph germs? Because the human body is the staph bacterium's natural habitat, says Gordon Dickinson, MD, chief of infectious diseases at the University of Miami and the Miami VA Medical Center.

"We are the ecology," Dickinson tells WebMD. "Humans are the ecological niche for Staphylococcus aureus. MRSA is just a variant."

This means the No. 1 hot spot for MRSA is: your nose.

"It can live in moist areas of the skin -- like under the arms, in the groin -- but you find it mainly inside the front of the nose," Dickinson says.

Whose nose? There's a very good chance it's your own.

"Our current understanding is that 20% of healthy people never seem to carry staph, while up to 60% carry it sometimes," Dickinson says. "And 20% of healthy people carry staph day in and day out, usually in their noses."

Most of these people carry the normal kind of staph. But an increasing number carry MRSA. Why doesn't it hurt them?

"We don't understand why staph causes mischief. Most of the time it does not," Dickinson says. "But presumably, little breaks in the skin allow it to get past our barriers. Then it can multiply -- and staph comes with a bundle of proteins and toxins and enzymes that allow it to do a lot of damage."

So how can you stop staph from getting from the front of your nose to your skin?

"Theoretically, one thing people can do is quit picking their noses. But that won't help -- studies show people can't keep their hands away from their noses," Dickinson says.

Fortunately, there are a number of ways to prevent infection with both normal staph and MRSA.

 

Stopping Staph

MRSA may be the latest scary germ to grab headlines, but good old-fashioned hygiene is the key to protection.

Here's how to keep MRSA at bay:

  • Wash your hands. Your hands are the part of your body most likely to pick up a germ and transfer it to an itchy sore, your eyes, your mouth, or your nose. So keep them clean. Use soap and warm water -- the rule of thumb is to scrub gently and thoroughly as long as it takes to sing the alphabet song.
  • Got a cut or scrape? Clean it -- and cover it with a bandage until it heals.
  • Avoid contact with other people's wounds or bandages.
  • Do not share towels, razors, or other personal items.
  • Remember the turf or grass field you are playing on cannot be disinfected. Players sweat, spit, slide and scrape their skin on those fields.
  • Shower right away after exercise, practice and games. Don't toss your wet towel in your gym bag. Clean and disinfect any gym bag that's come into contact with dirty athletic gear.
  • Wash all athletic clothing daily. Regularly wash athletic gear such as elbow pads, kneepads, shin guards. Alcohol or a bleach and water solution works well for equipment.  Practice vests should definitely be washed after each use.
  • Bathe every day. MRSA can live on the skin, but it can be washed away. Staph can enter the body through hair follicles, so be particularly careful to clean your groin, underarms, arms, and legs.
  • Be on the lookout for infections. Early on, a staph infection looks like a spider bite (a red, irritated bump). Don't wait -- have a nurse or doctor look at it.
  • If you have an infection, don't try to squeeze out the pus. This only spreads germs on your skin. Have ALL infections treated by a health professional.
  • Practice careful hygiene when visiting crowded facilities such as prisons, military bases, shelters, hospitals, and schools.

Parent Roles Within Youth Soccer

With competition and a dedication to youth soccer comes a big time and monetary commitment.  The advantages far outweigh the drawbacks as these young athletes focus in a competitive environment that keeps them out of trouble and away from negative influences.  Within the HPFC Soccer Club, we strive to be models for these young men and women, both on the soccer side and in helping them learn the value of becoming respected young adults in their community.  This is an evolving ideal, and we as coaches, parents, and administrators make mistakes.  We are all human, but controlling what we can control and attempting to be the best people we can be, only reinforces the ideal we want for these young men and women as they move toward adulthood and represent our community.

 

Because the parents of these players shoulder the burden of cost and time, they often times are as competitive as the players themselves.  The players can run around the field and work out frustration, where parents are left on the sidelines to watch things unfold that they may disagree with.  Whether it is a referee’s decision they disagree with or a coaching decision, it is difficult in a competitive situation to not be competitive!

 

So, here are a couple guidelines for parents from the HPFC Club, so we can be as effective as possible in coaching your sons and daughters.

 

As a parent,

1)      There is never a reason to talk to the referee (This is why we have captains, coaches, and a coaching director)

2)      There is never a reason to talk to a player on another team (except a “good job” as both teams exit the field).  Once the game is over, the game is over.

3)      Coaching your child from the sideline gives him/her another view and may contradict what the coach wants.   Encourage and cheer but leave the coaching to the coaches you entrusted your child with.

 

Finally, there are three things you can say before a game and three things you can say after the game that greatly advance the experience.

 

Before the Match

1) I love you

2) Good Luck

3) Have Fun

 

After the Match

1)      I love you

2)      It was great to see you play

3)      What would you like to eat!

 

We are all very competitive people and we play in very competitive leagues in a very competitive sport.  In order to have the best chance at development for your sons and daughters on the soccer side and the character side, we need your help to show these boys and girls how we want them to run our community when it is time for them to pass on their knowledge.

 

Thank you all for all your hard work within the HPFC Soccer Club.  I look forward to building this club, along with all of you, into the community asset it is.

 

Darren Sawatzky

HPFC Coaching Director

dtarzan66@hotmail.com