Concussion Safety

No Same Day Return To Play After Concussion

The most recent international consensus of concussion experts is that a young athlete with diagnosed concussion should not be allowed to return to play on the day of injury, regardless of the medical resources available and regardless of the level of athletic performance (in other words, even for an "elite" athlete).

High School and Pop Warner Football: Preventing Concussion, Serious Injury Or Death

Preventing serious injury (concussion, traumatic brain injury, spinal paralysis) or death in high school and Pop Warner football; advice from the National Center for Catastrophic Sports Injury Researc on football safety

Parent's Bill of Rights for Concussion Safety

The only way parents can sit in the stands without worrying sick about what might happen if their son or daughter suffers a concussion is if they know the program takes concussions very seriously, and that every member of the team - coach, athletic trainer, athlete, parent, and team doctor - is following the same playbook, or what I call the the Parent's Bill of Rights for Concussion Safety.

Concussion Signs and Symptoms

A concussion should be suspected when an athlete receiving a direct or indirect blow to the head which causes him to experience any post-concussion signs or symptoms, including but not limited to loss of consciousness or post-traumatic amnesia. If any of such symptoms or problems is present, a head injury should be suspected and appropriate management, including monitoring for deterioration, begun.

Concussions: Parents' Important Role in Evaluation, Recovery

Parents are "critical participants" in their child's recovery from a concussion, not only in the first 24 to 48 hours but during every step in the process towards an eventual return to the play.

Concussions in Children and Teens: Conservative Approach Recommended

Because the brain of the young athlete is still developing, with even subtle damage leading to learning deficits adversely affecting development, and with studies showing younger athletes recover more slowly than adults, all of the recent consensus statements on sport-related concussions recommend a more conservative approach to concussion management for the youth athlete than for older athletes.

Concussion Knowledge Needed In Minor League Hockey

A Canadian study of minor league hockey found that serious misconceptions existed among players, athletes, coaches and parents when it came to understanding the signs and symptoms of concussion and its treatment. 

Football Helmet FAQs

Players come and go, but football helmets get passed on to new players, season after season, year after year.  Here's some basic information parents should know about the football helmets their children are wearing.

Concussion Label Sends Wrong Message: Study

Does labeling a child's head injury as a "concussion" convey the wrong message to parents, athletes and athletic trainers about its seriousness? Perhaps, say the authors of a Canadian study reported in the February 2010 issue of the journal Pediatrics. Instead, they suggest that to encourage full reporting of head injuries in sports and to allow adequate management and recovery time the term "mild traumatic brain injury" (MTBI) be used in its place.

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