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Wound Management and Prevention of
Infection by
Craig S. Miller DMD, MS, Lisa Combs R.N. and Dr. Richard Greenberg
(Infectious Disease Specialist at UK) --
Skin cuts, abrasions and/or wounds are common in
contact sports. Players, coaches, referees, managers, parents/guardians
should be vigilant in protecting players from infection, as many
bacteria replicate fast once they enter a wound.
In fact, they can replicate several times over a few hours.
Accordingly, whenever a player, coach, referee, or manager
becomes aware of an abrasion in the skin due to player-player contact or
player-field contact (turf, goal, benches, etc.)
Spring Storms:
Play It Safe
Each year, about 400 children and adults in the U.S. are struck by lightning
while working outside, at sports events, on the beach, mountain climbing, mowing
the lawn or during other outdoor activities. About 80 people are killed and
several hundred more are left to cope with permanent disabilities. Many of these
tragedies can be avoided. Finishing the game, getting a tan, or completing a
work shift aren't worth death or crippling injury.
Sports Participation in Children: When to Begin?
by
Russell Ellis, M.D. --- Two seemingly contradictory trends have been
occurring in the United States over the past couple of decades. On the
one hand, our children are becoming more sedentary compared to children
of past generations, which helps to explain a corresponding rise in the
prevalence of childhood obesity. On the other hand, childhood
participation in organized sports is at an all-time high and the
participants, especially those training to become �elite� athletes, are
getting younger and younger.
All
There Is to Know About Blisters
National Center for Sports -- Blisters
are usually formed by friction, such as the shoe
rubbing on an area of the foot. The friction causes the outer skin
layers to separate and fluid accumulates between the two skin layers.
Athletic Nutrition for Young
Athletes
by Erin O'Neill
--
In a period when many parents enroll their
children in organized sports, it is imperative that basic nutrition
guidelines for young athletes be followed.
Healthier Snacks for Young Sports Teams
By Kathy
Stephenson -- JoAnn Vandenhazel remembers a time when the only thing her
soccer team wanted after a game was a drink from the
water jug.
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For more information, please contact us at:
StateOffice@kysoccer.net
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 This website is the official website of the
Kentucky Youth Soccer Association, Inc., 443 South Ashland
Avenue, Suite 201, Lexington,
Kentucky 40502 - Phone 859-268-1254 -
Facsimile 859-269-0545 �Kentucky Youth Soccer Association 2009. All rights
reserved. No commercial reproduction, adaptation, distribution or transmission
of any part or parts of this website or any information contained, herein
by any means whatsoever is permitted without the prior written permission
of Kentucky Youth Soccer.
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