, V.M .V k• 4k k... Wiz`?: , ▪ S te e 'lwri Z gr r, % Freshmen on campus may find more in the dorms than new found freedom. SHARI S. COHEN Special to the Jewish News ii s high school seniors and college freshmen look ahead to their first year of college, they typically focus on new friends, classes, sports and parties. Their families may urge them to "eat right" and "remember to get some sleep," but the advice is often spoken and heard without full understanding of its importance. However, news that a Michigan State University student was hospi- talized this fall with meningococcal disease, a bacterial form of meningitis, and a student at the University of Michigan was treated for viral meningitis, has raised questions about health risks on college campuses. Since the bacterial form of meningitis can be very serious, sometimes causing brain damage and even death, its recurrence at MSU raised concerns. Two years ago, three MSU students had meningitis and two died. Fortunately, meningo- coccal meningitis is rare — only one individual in 100,000 among the Eastern Michigan University's health general population con- service recommends these precautions tract the disease and 3.8 to reduce risk for meningitis: per 100,000 college stu • Don't share food or beverages dents in residence halls, • Don't share cigarettes according to U-M statis- • Stay home when sick (this lessens tics. With such a low exposure to other germs). incidence, this form of • Balance rest, school and play meningitis is "not a • Eat healthy. major problem," accord- • Avoid excessive use of alcohol. ing to Dr. Jeffrey Band, • Avoid smoke or smoky environ- an internist and infec- ments. tious disease specialist U-M's health service concurs with associated with these suggestions and also recom- Beaumont Hospital. mends: Meningitis means • Avoid exposure to people who are inflammation of the coughing. membrane covering the • Avoid kissing. brain and spinal cord. According to Dr. Band, ampus Advice /fr •,.. .11410n many people carry the bacteria without becoming ill. "Symptoms include fevers, nausea, vomiting and the worst headache the person has ever had. If diagnosed early, it is treatable with antibiotics," Dr. Band says. "It is a contagious disease transmitted through respiratory droplets. For college students, there is a slight increased risk in the,first year of school while in the dorm,7 says Dr. Band. This was borne out by two 1998 studies conducted by the Centers for Disease Control. A study published this year in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that Maryland college students living on campus had a higher incidence of the disease than those living off-campus. Increased risk is believed to result from living in "close quarters" where infectious diseases are most likely to spread and because of the lifestyle common among college freshmen, especially- those living in dorms or other group situations. "A lack of sleep, poor nutri- tion, smoking and alcohol reduce your body's immune system. Students live in close proximity and share beverage containers and cigarettes," says Dr. Howard Saulles, interim associate director of the U-M Health Service. He notes that there have been no cases of meningococcal meningi- tis at the Ann Arbor campus since 1995. As a result of reduced immunity and group living, colds, upper respiratory infections, influenza and mononucleosis are very common among college students, Dr. 4,5* • 6k ' 1/14 2000 105