Saturday, October 22, 2011

American Academy of Pediatrics Offers New Guidelness to Prevent Heat Illness Injury in Young Athletes

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

American Academy of Pediatrics Offers New Guidelness to Prevent Heat Illness Injury in Young Athletes
by American Academy of Pediatrics - 8/19/2011Before young athletes start physical conditioning for fall sports, pediatricians have some advice for the athletes, parents, and adults who are running practice on hot, humid days: Use some common sense and appropriate measures to keep the kids out of danger. 

In a revised policy statement, “Climatic Heat Stress and Exercising Children and Adolescents,” published in the September 2011 issue of Pediatrics (published online Aug. 8), the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends youth sports programs implement comprehensive strategies to safeguard against heat illness.

“Most healthy children and athletes can safely participate in outdoor sports and activities in a wide range of warm to hot weather, but adults sometimes create situations that are potentially dangerous,” said Stephen G. Rice, MD, FAAP, co-author of the policy statement and a former member of the executive committee of the AAP Council on Sports Medicine and Fitness. “Heat illness is entirely preventable if coaches and other adults take some precautions to protect the young athletes.”

Among the recommendations:

Providing risk-reduction training for coaches, trainers and other adults. Ensuring trained staff are available on-site to monitor for and promptly treat heat illness. Educating children about preparing for the heat to improve safety and reduce the risk for heat illness. Allowing children to gradually adapt to physical activity in the heat. Offering time for and encouraging sufficient fluid intake before, during and after exercise. Modifying activity as needed given the heat and limitations of individual athletes. Practices and games may need to be canceled or rescheduled to cooler times. Providing rest periods of at least 2 hours between same-day contests in warm to hot weather. Limiting participation of children who have had a recent illness or have other risk factors that would reduce exercise-heat tolerance. Developing and having in place an emergency action plan.

The most notable change in AAP policy is the recognition that children can tolerate and adapt to exercise in heat as well as similarly fit adults, when adequate hydration is maintained. The previous AAP policy, issued in 2000, suggested that children were less able to tolerate and adapt to heat stress compared to adults, but more recent research has found children and adults have similar physiological responses when exercising under the same conditions.

The revised policy focuses on what factors put kids in danger of exertional heat illness and how adults can modify youth athletic activities to minimize heat illness risk. The policy includes a detailed list of risk factors and possible modifications. But the new statement, unlike the previous one, does not give precise rules about whether games or practices should be canceled if temperatures reach a certain level.

“While coaches should make on-the-field decisions to improve safety for a team or event as a whole, individual participants may require more or less concern based on their health status and conditioning,” said co-author Michael F. Bergeron, PhD, FACSM, director of the National Institute for Athletic Health & Performance at Sanford USD Medical Center, in Sioux Falls, S.D.

As an example, the policy statement describes a healthy 12-year-old who is fit and used to the heat, and who would be fine playing soccer on a 95-degree day. But an overweight football player, who recently recovered from diarrhea, and who is running wind sprints at the end of the second three-hour workout on the first warm day of preseason football, will be at higher risk even if it’s only 85 degrees.

“Athletic directors, coaches, teachers and other adults who are overseeing children exercising in the heat should make themselves aware of ways to reduce the risk of heat illness, and they should develop an emergency action plan,” said Cynthia Devore, MD, FAAP, co-author of the statement and chairperson of the AAP Council on School Health. “This is especially important as we head into high school preseason football.”

The American Academy of Pediatrics is an organization of 60,000 primary care pediatricians, pediatric medical subspecialists and pediatric surgical specialists dedicated to the health, safety and well being of infants, children, adolescents and young adults. For more information, visit www.aap.org.



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