Head Trauma In Football

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“Football is, at its core, a violent sport” (Gregory). Currently in football, there are reports that reveal adults, as well as teens, of having head trauma that leads to long-term health risks and even death. The amount of youth football players and organizations are declining due to all of the concerns of head injuries and the diseases that occur while playing (Swaine). Players know the risk of playing the barbaric sport and they understand that it can result in permanent damage to their bodies. Brain injuries from football are having an effect on adults and the youth of the game, and if football is not made safer or corrected it will be taken out of society.
Concussions is having a negative impact on the brain’s …show more content…

Retired football players, in a study headed by the National Institute for Occupational Health and Safety, have a reduced life expectancy due to head trauma from the dangerous game (Easterbrook). The NIH gave a group of researchers around six million dollars to research and explain the symptoms and causes of CTE (Taylor). Results have also been found in the youth, not just the retired players, with minor to severe traumatic head injuries (Bachynski & Goldberg). In 2013 there were eight players who passed away on the football field. The amount has fluctuated ever since 2001 with a recorded nine deaths in that year alone (Gregory). CTE is not the only disease that is coming from repetition of blunt trauma to the brain, others include Alzheimer’s, dementia, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) (Taylor). Players are suffering from a compelling lack in normal sized volume in the hippocampus, a major key in the memory process (Gregory). Professionals and collegiate players are not the only ones who are suffering from the multiple diseases and problems that are coming from the sport of football, but the youth that play football is being affected as …show more content…

The idea of banning tackling and resorting to other methods are often spoke of in youth football to protect their stages of brain development (Easterbrook). The Return-To-Play policy is the procedure that is to be followed when a player has received a concussion or any other neurological injury. It is used loosely among high school coaching and training staffs (Bachynski & Goldberg). Many players at the professional and college level have a great staff of trainers to prevent and help with injuries unlike high school players who cannot afford those resources. Statistics from the National Athletic Trainers’ Association, thirty-nine percent of all high schools have a “full-time certified athletic trainer” on their staff and another thirty percent have no training or experience in training at all (Gregory). Youth football is implementing the “Heads-Up” method to teach kids the proper way of tackling and staying safe while making contact with an opposing player by keeping their head up so it does not lead to life threatening damage (Bachynski & Goldberg). Pro quarterback Kurt Warner stated that football and the safety of the sport “Scares me as a dad” (Swaine). The safety that comes with football is only as safe as the technology and the proper

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