Dangerous staph infections are on the rise at schools across the
nation, officials report.
Several students have been hospitalized.
Schools say the outbreaks of staph infections are occurring mostely
among athletes, and the germs include an antibiotic-resistant strain
that is sometimes associated with serious skin problems and blood
disorders.
The infections have forced districts to call off classes, cancel
sporting events and disinfect entire buildings.
Many of the infections are being spread in gyms and locker rooms, where
athletes — perhaps suffering from cuts or abrasions — share sports
equipment.
In Virginia, a Newport News high school closed its weight room Thursday
to be disinfected after at least four students were infected — one with
the drug-resistant strain. The drug-resistant patient, a football
player, was hospitalized for three days.
On Friday, the high school in Galax, Va., postponed a football game
because of an infection on its football team. School officials said
they could not clean the equipment in time for the kickoff.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta does not
track staph infections but confirmed that the cases seem to be more
widespread than in the past.
"Most of these are mild infections," agency spokeswoman Nicole Coffin
said. "They can be as simple as a pimple or a boil, or as serious as a
blood infection."
The drug-resistant strain, called methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus strain, or MRSA, can be especially stubborn. It resists
treatment with penicillin and related antibiotics but can be treated
with other drugs.
The potentially fatal germ typically thrives in health care settings
where people have open wounds. But in recent years, outbreaks have also
occurred in schools.
Virginia public schools spokesman Charles Pyle said the Education
Department's health specialist has received about eight calls about the
problem since school started. Last year, he received only two calls
during the entire fall semester.
"We're not viewing this as something to be overly alarmed about," Pyle
said.
He said the department will send information about prevention and
treatment to Virginia's 132 school districts for distribution to
schools and parents.
MRSA is spread mostly through personal contact, although sharing
towels, razors or athletic equipment also can spread the bacteria.
Frequent and thorough hand-washing is one of the most important
preventive measures, said Coffin, of the CDC.
In neighboring Maryland, more than two dozen staph infections have been
reported by four Anne Arundel County high schools over the past three
weeks. School officials said cleaning crews have been scrubbing all 12
high schools with hospital disinfectant.
In western Ohio, 800 students at Troy Christian Schools were sent home
early Tuesday as a precaution after at least one student contracted
MRSA. Superintendent Gary Wilber said classrooms, lockers, student
belongings, buses and other equipment were disinfected.
At least three other Ohio high schools disinfected their facilities
after students reported staph infections.
Health officials in North Carolina and Florida also noted an increase
in staph infections.
Iona College in New Rochelle, N.Y., reported two cases of MRSA
involving athletes last month, and at least two dozen athletes at three
New Hampshire schools recently came down with skin infections.
Original
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Schools Say Treatment-Resistant Staph Infections on the Rise
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