BEDFORD,
Va. — A high school student has died as the result of a
treatment-resistant staph infection, prompting Virginia
officials to shut down 21 schools to keep the illness
from spreading.Ashton Bonds, 17, a senior at
Staunton River High School in Bedford, Va., died Monday
after being hospitalized for a week with Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus, his mother said.
"I want people to know how sick it made my son,"
Veronica Bonds said.
Bedford Superintendent James Blevins said at a news
conference Tuesday that the schools will be closed for
cleaning Wednesday.
Staph infections, including the serious MRSA strain,
have spread through schools nationwide in recent weeks,
according to
health and education officials.
MRSA is a strain of staph bacteria that does not
respond to penicillin and related antibiotics but can be
treated with other drugs. The infection can be spread by
skin-to-skin contact or sharing an item used by an
infected person, particularly one with an open wound.
Many of the infections are being spread in
gyms and locker rooms, where athletes — perhaps
suffering from cuts or abrasions — share sports
equipment. Ashton Bonds played football last year but
was not playing this season.
Ashton went to Bedford Memorial Hospital on Oct. 4
after complaining of pain in his side, his mother said.
He was sent
home after doctors ruled out appendicitis, but was
readmitted three days later and transported to Carilion
Roanoke Memorial Hospital.
Last week doctors diagnosed Ashton with a MRSA
infection that had spread to his kidneys, liver, lungs
and the muscles around his
heart.
Early Thursday morning, Ashton had to be sedated and
put on a ventilator. He was about to undergo surgery to
drain the infection from his lungs when doctors detected
a
blood clot near his heart. Bonds said the clot was
inoperable.