Booster Shots

Oddities, musings and some news from the world of health.

A U.S. Olympic team doctor blogs from Beijing: The guts, the glory, the gastrointestinal problems

Swim500

Amid all the hoopla that is the Beijing Summer Olympics, it’s understandable that some things are lost in the wake of feats such as acquiring eight gold medals.

Take, for instance, the live-from-the-Beijing Olympics blog being written by Dr. Scott Rodeo (pronounced row-dee-oh, not the fancy row-day-oh), an orthopedic surgeon on the medical team treating U.S. Olympic athletes. He may not have the cachet of Oprah-approved Dr. Mehmet Oz, but Rodeo has great creds — he’s the co-chief of the Sports Medicine and Shoulder Service at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City, associate team physician for the New York Giants, and a former competitive swimmer. He’s done the Olympics gig before as the U.S. Olympic team’s physician at the Athens Games in 2004. The hospital’s public relations director suggested he blog via his Blackberry about his experiences as one of several medical personnel at the event, and so he has, starting with the swim team’s training camp in Singapore. Which is great, except the posts are … less than spine-tingling.

"I have continued to treat both gastrointestinal illness as well as sinusitis, upper respiratory conditions, coughs, and sore throats," he writes. "We have also had a few minor injuries in swimmers (finger, elbow) which occurred from a forceful finish."

All righty then.

Frankly, we feel for Rodeo, who must be caught between a rock and a hard place. On one hand, he certainly has no desire to see nasty injuries befall the athletes, most of whom have trained years for this opportunity. On the other hand, flying about 7,000 miles to treat diarrhea must be … a touch of a disappointment.

"There’s enough other stuff going on," he says, chuckling. "The less I see the better, because it means that everybody’s healthy."

A phone conversation (part of which took place en route to an event as Rodeo’s bag, filled with syringes and such, was being checked by security) yielded more info on what Rodeo’s been up to. Although his main focus is on swimmers, he cares for other U.S. and foreign athletes as well, plus a few media people and NBC staffers thrown in for good measure.

As for the athletes, "There may be a number of little things that you treat," he says. "More significant things are small fractures, which can be taped, and if it’s not too serious the athlete may keep competing. Most things are muscle strains — some are acute and demand attention." Those, he adds, are usually treated with ice and anti-inflammatory medications.

Various sports, he explains, yield specific types of injuries. Swimmers, for example, typically suffer overuse injuries such as shoulder strains, caused by repetitive arm movements. They can also suffer acute injuries such as fractures if they smash their hands against the pool wall during a finish. Track athletes can have stress reactions, a chronic bone injury that can be a precursor to a stress fracture.

It’s obvious that Rodeo must be prepared to treat anything, like the aforementioned gastrointestinal issues, which are typical for travelers and can stem from changes in water, food, and environment and can alter the GI tract’s bacterial balance. Nerves, he adds, are probably a factor in some of these cases. He’s been treating most mild cases with anti-diarrheal medications, and more serious ones with antibiotics. The danger here, Rodeo says, is dehydration: "Athletes can lose a lot of fluid, and that can affect performance."

For those hoping Rodeo would name names of who’s been injured and how, don’t hold your breath. The United States Olympic Committee prohibits him from giving out specifics. But a couple of nuggets were extracted: Michael Phelps is a stand-up guy who hasn’t gotten a swelled head from his phenomenal accomplishments. "He’s a good person, normal, he puts his pants on one leg at a time." Or should that be super-duper Speedos? Most athletes at this level, he adds, are pretty savvy about injuries and treatment and don’t act like prima donnas around the docs.

Despite a rigorous work schedule (he’s had little time to sightsee), Rodeo’s perks are getting to attend the competitions (he witnessed Phelps’ win in the 100-meter butterfly), as well as gather useful information to take home.

"You see injuries as they occur, as opposed to people coming in to see me a day later," he says. "So we can see what the best scenario is right away and learn how to get someone back quickly."

The blog has received about 1,000 visitors over seven days of tracking, and has received five comments. He sums up his month away from home this way: "It’s a neat experience on a lot of levels."

-Jeannine Stein

Photo credit: Martin/Presse Sports via US PRESSWIRE.

When a soccer game is just a game

Beckham Is this really what David Beckham would do?

We can tell kids to eat healthy food and exercise, we can even set a good example by doing so ourselves. But what will truly motivate them is ... a hand-held video game! So seems to be the premise of an interactive soccer game from MatchMaster, which comes with the imprimatur of the David Beckham Academy.

A couple of the new games landed on my desk this week, with marketing material boldly announcing the introduction of "an interactive game that combines fun with fitness." Fitness? About time.

But "fitness," it turns out, is used in more of a theoretical sense. The hand-held game stresses the importance of training, eating right and rest by ... making it important for the virtual player. Great! The imaginary players in kids' backpacks or pockets will be fit as a fiddle.

Your kids?  Well, perhaps one more repeat of the "eat right and exercise" mantra is just what they need. This time, they'll take it to heart.

Want kids to get off the couch and figure out that moving around can be, I don't know, kind of fun? That junk food might not enhance their performance? That practice makes them better? That they won't play very well if they didn't sleep well the night before? Sign them up for the real thing. Start with the American Youth Soccer Organization (honestly, it seems to be everywhere anyway) or your own rec league or school.

I've nothing against video games, but let's not kid ourselves that they'll make kids healthier.

-- Tami Dennis

Photo: Shaun Botterill / Getty Images

Wii Fit gets a tryout

Wii500

Nintendo's newest product, Wii Fit ($90), is available for purchase Wednesday. It won't replace a health club, a personal trainer or hopping on a treadmill or an elliptical crosstrainer, but it may make a dent in the home-fitness market. It is fun, easy to use and can be brutally honest.

When you first step onto the Wii Balance Board, a sturdy platform that comes with the system, it asks for your age and height and figures out your body mass index (BMI). Sensors in the board detect a user's weight and balancing skills, too, because you are given a balance assessment. With my 4- and 7-year-olds watching and my wife nearby, Fit told me I was overweight (maybe!) and that my Wii Fit age was 57 (I'm really 54).

After the balance assessment (I didn't do so well), it asked, ''Do you find yourself tripping often?'' and that got my family laughing hysterically.

Then my wife (former gymnast, former collegiate diver) got on. Her Wii Fit age was . . . well it was one year younger than she really is, but she flunked the balance test, too, so there!

Once you get past the assessment, you can pick a trainer -- male or female (I took female) -- and then choose from aerobics, strength training, yoga or balance. I did aerobics (step aerobics) and strength training (push ups with side plank) and did OK. My 7-year-old son loved doing the hula hoop activity.

Each segment (there are more than 40) is only about three to five minutes -- not enough to break a sweat in a serious gym rat, but okay for the person who wants to have some fun and start an exercise regimen.

--Gary Metzker

Photo: Associated Press


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Our Bloggers
Tami Dennis, who takes the word "skeptic" to previously uncharted territory, is editor of The Times' Health section. She's adamant that pitches promoting awareness days, weeks or months are, by their nature, non-stories. And, because she's an adult, she refuses to use words like "veggies," "tummy" and "yummy."
Rosie Mestel, Health section deputy editor, studied genetics before abandoning flies, fungi and DNA for health/medical writing. Her hero is the biologist Ernst Haeckel, whose jellyfish paintings inspired snazzy chandeliers. Her favorite toast-spread is Marmite, a British delicacy made of yeast extract. Her least-favorite word is "millenniums."
Susan Brink has made health and medicine her beat for 26 of her 28 years in the business. She’s covered a wide range of disease and health policy stories, and is always on the lookout for fresh angles. Few things make her happier than busting through preconceived notions to give readers an accurate view of people behaving as…well, real people.
Melissa Healy is a staff writer for the Health section reporting from Washington D.C. Healy's a veteran of The Times' National staff, having covered the Pentagon, Congress, poverty and social welfare, the environment, and the White House before shifting to Health in 2003. She writes frequently about mental health and human behavior, about federal health policy, prescription medication and ethics in medicine. More wonk than wellness freak, Healy chooses to believe in the health benefits of coffee and wine, and considers water a better work-out medium than beverage.
After a brief stint as a sports writer, Shari Roan turned to health journalism and has covered the topic for The Times for 18 years. She is the author of three books and the mother of two daughters, both teenagers who refer to her as a "health freak." She likes to jog, watch baseball and is very happy that dark chocolate contains some health benefit.
Jeannine Stein writes about fitness, sports medicine and obesity for the Health section. She’s a gym rat from way back and never met an elliptical trainer she didn’t like. Well, maybe one or two. She tempers exercise with a steady diet of reality television because she believes it’s all about balance.