Barefooted In Public Places
Locker rooms and other public spaces with high barefoot traffic,
including pools and saunas, are ripe for acquiring cutaneous infections or
infections of the skin that can be caused by fungus, viruses and bacteria.
Keeping your feet clean and dry is the key to protecting yourself from
acquiring these common infections.
One easy way to do just that is to not walk barefoot through public
locker rooms and bathrooms. Instead, wear shoes, sandals or flip-flops.
Remember, though, to keep sandals dry and clean and sanitize them often because
bacteria also can thrive on porous surfaces like flip-flops and wooden shoes.
Locker rooms and public pools are high barefoot traffic areas which make
them great places for picking up germs through exposed skin. That is because
they are chock full of people shedding skin and viruses. They are also the
perfect conditions for growing bacteria which prefer warm and wet environments.
Let us look
at the types of skin infections and the methods of treatment.
Fungal Infections.
Fungal infections, such as athlete’s foot, can be passed from person to
person or acquired from the environment. Typically, they hang out on gymnasium
shower floors and they thrive in wet and warm environments. The longer that
your feet remain wet and hot and not dry, the more likely that the fungus
proliferates.
Those who keep their feet covered for a long time are particularly at
risk. That means athletes who are constantly sweating or workers who are in
construction-style boots all day. The fungus spreads between toes and on the
sides of feet. It can cause a lot of itch, pain and scaling. And, after it is
been on your feet for a long time, it can pass from in between your toes to
your toenail.
It can
spread even further to the groin forming jock itch, often caused when underwear
is pulled on from the ground up, dragging the fungus from the feet to the
genitals. There is a lot of consistency with what you find on the feet and what
you find on the groin.
Treatments for fungal
infections include anti-fungal medications and topical ointments and sprays.
Viral Infections.
A good example of a viral infection is the wart and the virus is
everywhere. There are so many kinds of warts: common, flat warts, genital warts
- all caused by the HPV virus. It is a virus that lives in the top layer of
your skin. You shed the virus slowly over time, often with or without having
active warts. The virus loves to leave our skin and shed.
When you
are in public spaces at the pool or beach, many people are shedding the virus.
You are more likely to pick up those viruses in areas of weakness like your
hands and feet that are in contact with fomites, inanimate objects that acquire
and hold viruses and bacteria that you can later get.
Molluscum is another virus that is more common in kids and easily spread
by touch. It takes the form of bumps that dip down in the centre, like tiny
donuts and can be widespread in immuno-compromised people. They love wet
objects such as towels, pool noodles and rubber duckies. Kids can be covered in
them but once the virus is cleared, it usually never comes back.
Treatments for viral infections often include removal by freezing or
scrapping, medications and/or topical creams.
Bacterial Infections.
Staphylococcus
- or “staph” - is a group of bacteria capable of causing bodily infection.
Staph is normally present in the nose and on the skin of about 30 percent of
healthy adults and causes no harm. But an exposed opening in the skin may allow
the bacteria to penetrate the skin’s natural barriers and cause an infection.
Staph is transmitted by direct or indirect contact with
someone who has an active staph infection and that can happen even in showers.
Shared gymnasium equipment such as free weights, benches and workout
machines can harbour the bacteria and spread infection from person to person.
You can acquire folliculitis, abscesses or even serious internal
infections.
Treatment
usually involves antibiotics. In rare cases, the staph bacteria can enter the
bloodstream and spread to other organs, causing more serious complications.
Besides steering clear of
these areas, here are some other ways to limit your exposure to foot infections
of all kinds:
·
Take an immediate, quick shower
after working out or swimming. Wash your feet with soap and water.
·
Dry your feet with a clean
towel. Be sure to dry the spaces between your toes. Blow-dry your feet with a
hairdryer.
·
Wear clean socks every time you
put your shoes on and wear shoes as much as possible. Since fungus can live in
your shoes, change them often and do not just wear the same pair of sneakers or
work boots.
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