There was an article in the IDS yesterday about an IU diver, Cassady Kahn who contracted MRSA. I went over to talk to her and hear her description of her experience. she was misdiagnosed a number of times(by trainers,doctors,specialists), and it wasn't until she was extremely sick that they finally diagnosed it correctly, and within hours of being too late. It sounded like the surgeon had to cut out any infected area, including skin fascia, muscle and some bone. She has a long scar (~8") on the side of each of her legs: She ended up needing multiple (12) surgeries, some of which was reconstructive after having lost so much tissue to the infection, as well as some very difficult physical therapy to get back to health. After looking at the information that Cassady had assembled, I realized that the information we just posted on keeping the academy and student clean is probably inadequate.
the thing that stopped me in my tracks is this:
MRSA Life Span Facts4
• MRSA can live for up to 7 months on dust.
• MRSA can live for up to 8 weeks on a mop head.
• MRSA can live for up to 9 weeks on cotton (towel).
• MRSA can live for up to 203 days (over 6 months) on a blanket.
• MRSA can live on the skin of otherwise healthy individuals, with no symptoms indefinitely.
4Journal of Infection Control (2001) 49: 255-261.
The fact that hot water and a hot dryer helps kill MRSA might prompt us to rethink "washing the gi in cold water" and not to dry them, as many are told, to control shrinkage.
There is alot written on MRSA, One source Cassasdy used was by a company selling antimicrobial skin cleaner, but the info they have seems really thorough, and is intended to be distributed in varous formats in pdf, video, etc.
I found alot of useful information on their website.
It includes this personal testimonial which is apparently very accurate. Talking to Cassady and hearing what she went through, is parallels what happened to her.
http://www.hibiclens.com/mrsa_video/index.html
here are a couple more:
http://www.hibiclens.com/movies/1-mrsa_vs_athletes.mov - first of a series of videos: focuses on skin to skin contact between athletes as the prime method of MRSA spreading.
http://www.hibiclens.com/mrsa_information.html : quick and dirty just text with references so you know where the info came from. It has the MRSA life span info.
http://www.hibiclens.com/edu_materials.html
downloadable pdfs meant to be distributed to inform people about MRSA
additional info:
from USA Wrestling: http://www.themat.com/CoachesCorner/FinalMRSAGuide.pdf
after that, there is always whatever you find on the web...
Talking to Cassady was a very sobering reminder that we have to do what we can to help reduce the risk of MRSA infections. I think I am going to start using an anti-microbial cleanser that provides residual kill for 6 hours, before I get on the mat.
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