Title: Infectious Diseases, Bloodborne Pathogens, and Universal Precautions'
1Infectious Diseases, Bloodborne Pathogens, and
Universal Precautions.
2What are bloodborne pathogens?
- A clean and sterile environment is VIP
- Must take precautions to prevent disease
transmission - A lot of contact in the athletic environment
- Disease causing microorganisms
- Bacteria, viruses, parasites, fungi
- Present in blood and other body fluids
- Semen, vaginal secretions, cerbrospinal fluid,
synovial fluid, and any fluid contaminated with
blood - Direct vs. indirect transmission
- How do pathogens enter the body?
3Infection and immunity
- Stages of infection
- Incubation
- Prodromal stage
- Acute stage
- Decline stage
- Recovery stage
- Immune system
- Mechanical defenses
- Cellular defenses
- Antigens
- Leukocytes
- Macrophages
- Natural immunity
- Acquired immunity
- Common immunizations
- Types of outbreaks
4(No Transcript)
5Hepatitis B
- Stronger/durable than HIV
- High probability of spreading
- Can live on surface for 7 days
- Causes swelling, soreness, and decreased liver
function - Flu-like symptoms, fatigue, weakness, nausea,
abdominal pain, headache, fever, jaundice - Possible to spread without showing signs
- Positive blood test in 2-6 weeks 85 recover
- Vaccine available (3 innoculations)
- OSHA mandated workplace availability in 1991
6(No Transcript)
7Human immunodeficiency virus
- Caused by a family of retroviruses
- Decreases disease fighting effectiveness
- Estimated 40 million carriers (and RISING)
- Symptoms transmitted through fluid contact (sex,
needle, transfusion) - Fatigue, weight loss, muscle/joint pain, swollen
glands, fever - Antibodies detected within 3 months-1 year
- Can go 8-10 years without symptoms
- AIDS acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
- No protection against opportunistic infections
and/or cancers - No vaccine or cure
- Best prevention is EDUCATION
8HIV virus up close and personal
9(No Transcript)
10(No Transcript)
11(No Transcript)
12(No Transcript)
13(No Transcript)
14Oceania lt0.5
Americas 5
Europe 10.6
Asia 7
Europe 2
USA 5
Oceania lt1
USA 34.8
Asia 5.5
Africa 81
Excluding USA
Africa 35.5
Americas 13.1
15Eastern Europe Central Asia 270,000 (0.8)
Western Europe 500,000 (1.5)
North America 890,000 (2.7)
East Asia Pacific 560,000 (1.7)
Caribbean 330,000 (1)
North Africa Middle East 210,000 (0.6)
South South East Asia 6.7 million (20)
Latin America 1.4 million (4.2)
Sub-Saharan Africa 22.5 million (67)
Australasia 12,000 (lt0.1)
16Blood and athletics
- Minimal risk of on-field transmission of HIV (no
validated reports) - Higher risk in sports with close contact
- Most leagues have rules governing blood on the
field - HIV positive athletes no clear participation
answer - Avoid fluid contact
- Heavy exercise may lead to decreased immune
response - ADA precludes discrimination
- Testing for HIV mandatory testing as screening
tool illegal - Encourage athletes with high-risk behaviors to be
tested - Testing at 6 weeks, 3 months, 1 year
post-exposure - High-risk workers tested every year
17Universal precautions
- OSHA guidelines protect patient and worker
- Athletes should cover all open wounds before
practice - When bleeding happens on the field
- NCAA and USOC rules
- Remove from field
- Control bleeding
- Change bloody uniforms
- Cover wound
- Personal protective equipment
- Gloves, gowns, aprons, masks, etc.
- Wear when treating patient or handling biohazard
material - Double glove for sharps or heavy bleeding
- Wash hands before and after donning gloves
- Coaches and ATCs must have yearly training
18Biohazardous material
- OSHA mandates use of bleach,
antiseptics, and marked
containers - Biohazard label on all
containers, red bags,
and refrigerators - Contaminated surfaces cleaned with 110
bleach/water solution or EPA-approved solution - Put sharps in plastic/marked container
- Always use gloves
- Contaminated laundry Separated from other
laundry and washed in HOT water for 25 mintues - Post-exposure complete medical exam, blood
test, counseling
19Skin wounds
- Wound any break in the continuity of tissue
- Skin has 2 layers dermis and epidermis
- Classified by force that causes them
- Treat all wounds as if they are contagious
- Focus box 8-4 (clean, medicate, dressed)
- Tetanus bacteria causes lockjaw, fever, and
convulsions - Enters the wound as a spore and acts on the motor
end plate of the CNS - Initial vaccination in childhood with boosters
every 10 years
20Abrasion
21Laceration
22Incision
23Puncture
24Avulsion
25Amputation