Concussion Safety and Awareness is a Priority: News of the Day

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In the past four years, there were nearly 400,000 reported concussions in high school athletes. These young athletes are at the highest risk for long-term brain damage from concussions and often are not even aware that the injury has occurred.

The Education and Labor Committee today held a hearing on legislation that would better educate students, parents and coaches about the danger of concussions in young athletes. Witnesses included a former NFL player, a neurologist, a high school athlete and a mother grieving the loss of her young son. CNN reported on the hearing:

“The House Education and Labor Committee's hearing came after news last week about the first active college football player known to have a debilitating condition usually seen in retired or aging athletes who've suffered repeated head injuries.

“Researchers at the Boston University School of Medicine Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy revealed that a 21-year-old defensive lineman, Owen Thomas, had mild stages of a type of brain damage called chronic traumatic encephalopathy.

“Thomas, a captain of the University of Pennsylvania football team and a student at the Wharton School of Business, hung himself in his room in April.

 “Owen Thomas, 21, was found to have mild stages of a type of brain damage called chronic traumatic encephalopathyCTE, which is a type of brain damage, has been more typically seen in older former athletes and can cause neurobehavioral disorders and bizarre behavior, including suicide. It is impossible to determine whether Thomas' brain condition and suicide were linked.

“‘The only possible explanation we can see for the presence of CTE is that Owen started to play football at the age of 9,’ his mother, Rev. Katherine Brearley of Allentown, Pennsylvania, said in her testimony at the hearing.”

The Protecting Student Athletes from Concussions Act would help improve concussion safety and management for student athletes by requiring school districts to develop and implement a community-based plan for concussion safety and management.

And it’s not just football players who are at higher risk, as witness Alison Conca-Cheng showed. USA Today wrote:

“That point was brought home by Alison Conca-Cheng, a 17-year-old high school soccer player and honors student from Ellicott City, Md., who suffered a concussion when she collided with a teammate's head in a practice game.

“‘I had tunnel vision,’ she told the committee. ‘Then I had severe balance problems and lingering headaches. I was dazed and confused.’

“Conca-Cheng had taken a pre-season computerized baseline concussion test, which she was required to repeat after the injury. In two attempts, she failed to match her pre-injury scores on tests of short-term memory and reading and was kept out of practice for two weeks.”

1 Comments

Hello Congressman Miller,

I am extremely glad to hear you are proposing legislation protecting student athletes from concussions. Our son is a high school junior and he plays in the school's varsity water polo team. Just about a year ago he suffered 2 concussions, 48 hours apart, playing water polo. We were extremely lucky that he was referred to the right specialist for follow-up, and that this doctor diagnosed the 2 concussions and ordered him to rest from school, sports, and any exertion of his brain for several weeks. Had we not followed this advice, our son would most likely have returned to play too soon and could have suffered yet a third concussion.

It is imperative that the schools put into place procedures for preventing concussions, recognizing them, and helping students deal with the short term academic impairment that ensues throughout the recovery phase from concussions. Our son eventually fully recovered from his concussion, after several months. However, during his recovery, no one at his school fully appreciated what he was going through, and if anything his teachers just added to the stress of his recovery. This why there must be legislation requiring the schools to treat student athletes with concussions accordingly.

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