Washington, D.C, area parents swamped schools Friday with calls
and overwhelmed Internet lists for information about staph
inspections following a report on the NBC early morning news show
"Today" that was broadcast from outside Walt Whitman High School in
nearby Bethesda, Maryland.
"They are using our school as a backdrop to tell the national
story, NOT because we have more staph infections!" Whitman
Principal Alan Goodwin quickly told parents in an e-mail.
School officials throughout the area tried to allay fears,
saying the germ that has worried football coaches and health
officers in recent years is only now entering the broader
consciousness because of a death in southern Virginia's Bedford
County and a wave of news coverage.
Health officers and educators said they don't know what to do
about the flurry of "superbug" reports, which include 14 from
Montgomery County, six each from Fairfax and Prince William
counties, two each from Howard County and Alexandria, and one from
Anne Arundel County. In addition, a teacher at Davis Elementary
School in Southeast Washington has been infected. A case of
methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus has been diagnosed in a
D.C. firefighting recruit, but he has been cleared to return to
training.
Reports of the staph infection aren't assembled, compared and
reported with the same attention as outbreaks of tuberculosis or
meningitis, officials said.
Health officials say drug-resistant staph is increasingly common
outside of hospitals and is affecting otherwise healthy people more
often, particularly football players, whose sport requires skin
contact, which is one of the ways staph is spread.
Many of the staph infections are fairly mild, but the virulent
strain can turn a cut into a swollen, inflamed and painful wound.
At first, such an infection might resemble a pimple, boil or spider
bite. If it becomes invasive and potentially serious, symptoms can
include fever, chills and shortness of breath. The infection,
confirmed through a skin or blood culture, requires treatment with
several antibiotics.
Christopher Novak, a medical epidemiologist with the Virginia
Department of Health, said the number of MRSA cases has been
increasing nationwide, but simple precautions, such as
hand-washing, significantly limit the risk of infection. "I think
people should be concerned. They should not be fearful," Novak
said.
(Agencies via Xinhua News Agency October 20, 2007)