1 / 19

Medical Issues At The Commonwealth Games: Lessons From The Youth Games

Medical Issues At The Commonwealth Games: Lessons From The Youth Games. Dr Eleanor Tillett Honorary Consultant in Sport & Exercise Medicine University College London Hospital 21.7.2010. Overview . Setting the scene Medical issues Traveller’s diarrhoea Other issues

Download Presentation

Medical Issues At The Commonwealth Games: Lessons From The Youth Games

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Medical Issues At The Commonwealth Games:Lessons From The Youth Games Dr Eleanor Tillett Honorary Consultant in Sport & Exercise Medicine University College London Hospital 21.7.2010

  2. Overview Setting the scene Medical issues Traveller’s diarrhoea Other issues Lessons for Dehli 2010

  3. First Impressions!

  4. The Plan! – Prevention of TD

  5. Summary Of Medical Contacts • Total No. Contacts: 166 (122 team members) • New: 98Follow Up: 68 • Diarhhoea was the commonest reason to present • New presentations including symptoms of diarrhoea: 25/98 (26%)

  6. Audit Standards All receive written & verbal advice re prevention All issued with & use alcohol hand gel No athlete required to withdraw from competition No official absent from duties for >24hrs ≤5% of cases presenting within 24hrs of a case in the same room ≤5% of cases presenting within 24hrs of a case in the same sport ≥95% cases managed according to protocol

  7. Prevention & Management Guide Prevention Management Written & verbal advice Staff offered antibiotic prophylaxis Isolation • Simple: • immodium/codeine • fluid replacement • Significant: • antibiotics • isolation • stool cultures Prevention Traveller’s Diarrhoea Hill & Ryan, BMJ, Oct 2008 Published 6 October 2008

  8. TD – How Did We Do? i.e. 24 cases of TD

  9. Rates Of TD In Sub Groups

  10. The Plan! - Management Non-significant TD Symptomatic relief (if required) Hygiene advice Significant TD Isolation Stool culture Abx Symptomatic relief

  11. Did It Work…? No athlete missed their competition No official was out of action for more than 12hrs

  12. Other Points To Note… • More cases as the event went on • 10/24 cases occurred in last 48hrs! • Eating off menu • Eating out of the village • 2/24 cases occurred within 24hrs of someone else in the same room • 10/24 cases occurred within 24hrs of another member of the same sporting team • 2/24 cases treated in full accordance with protocol

  13. The Plague!

  14. Psychology & Boxers • Fumagation: • Heavy fumagation in communal areas • Light fumagation in bedrooms • ‘Psychology’ • Boxers room given ‘heavy’ fumagation & moved into isolation room for 24hrs

  15. Lessons For Dehli 2010 We can take Team England into a challenging environment a not have a single athletes miss their event because of TD! Plus… • Advise not to eat off menu/ outside of village • Ability to isolate • Consider rifampicin for athlete prophylaxis • Consider probiotics Setting standards for the prevention & management of TD in elite sporting teams Tillett & Loosemore Br J Sports Med 2009;43:1045-1048

  16. Other Things Medical • They had a polyclinic – very helpful • They had ambulances but… • They had stretchers but… • They had doctors but…(not pre hosp/sem specialists)

  17. All Worth It!

More Related