“Media’s Influence on the Invisible Injury”

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A day that most people would remember for the rest of their life ended fast for a seventeen-year-old senior soccer player. She was in the state championship. She had dreamed of being in this game all her life and little did she know that it was going to be her final game. She was feeling great but nervous. The game started and ten minutes into the game she went for a header and hit heads with her opponent and then smacked her head off the ground. She told everyone that she was fine and that she could continue to play, but little did everyone know she was having the worst headache of her life and she was lightheaded and dizzy. She played through it, however. With only thirty seconds left in the championship, she was still fighting her head injury so she could concentrate to play. There was a corner kick. The game was depending on this corner. The girl went for a diving header, she hit her head off the goal post, but she was not worried because she had scored the winning goal. And everyone was so happy, on the bus ride home after the award ceremony. The athlete sat on the bus still not telling anyone about her head and how bad it was she was just happy she had scored the winning goal and they had won. She passed out on the bus, and everyone thought she was just sleeping. She had gone into a coma. Two days later, the doctors would tell her parents that she had no chance of living because she had too much bleeding in her brain. The next day the seventeen-year-old soccer player died from what the doctors would diagnose her with as a traumatic brain injury also known as a concussion. Sports- related concussions have received considerable attention from the media and scientific literature in recent years. As a result, all levels of compe...

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... the mire word "concussion" can have a lasting effect on the athlete for the future in either sports or a job (Bella, Timothy).
When we look into the sport of hockey over the past 10 years we see a difference in the articles that are published to the public. There has been a shift in not only reporting brain injuries when they happen to star players, but also in reporting them more broadly across a variety of levels of skills, the ability to recognize the long-term severity and impact of traumatic brain injury to the player and the need to take action against aggression, but on the other hand, here is the theme that head injuries are just part of the game and that anyone who plays has to accept the risk or not play the game (Cusimano et al. 4). The role that such media reports have on youth attitudes and the culture of hockey cannot be ignored (Cusimano et al. 5).

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