The N.F.L created the head, neck, and spine committee with the intention of diagnosing, preventing, and treating any N.F.L football player that sustains an injury, including concussions. However, concussions remain a major issue happening in the football world and players continue to remain affected by them. In fact during the 2015 pre and regular season games, 271 players sustained concussions, making it a 31.6 increase from 2014 (Breslow). This set of statistics proves that the concussion crisis continues to increase because each year more players continue to become affected by concussions. Furthermore, it tells people that concussions don’t only happen in regular games, but during pre season games as well. In addition concussions regularly occur in highschool and little league football. As a matter of fact, around 47% of concussions occur in high school students (Sports). Which represents one of the highest percentages among other high school sports. This again proves that concussions do not only happen in the major leagues. The N.F.L also plays a major rule in these outside leagues. The New York Times stated, “the league’s public position could influence other levels of football because many college, high school and youth leagues take their cues…
Football is an inherently flawed sport. It calls upon men to sacrifice their bodies and minds by using their heads as battering rams over and over again. In his Offensive Play, a 2009 article in the New Yorker, Malcolm Gladwell explains “much of the attention in the football world, in the past few years, has been on concussions—on diagnosing, managing, and preventing them—and on figuring out how many concussions a player can have before he should call it quits. But a football player’s real issue isn’t simply with repetitive concussive trauma. It is, as the concussion specialist Robert Cantu argues, with repetitive subconcussive trauma. It’s not just the handful of big hits that matter. It’s lots of little hits, too (Gladwell).” There is no extricating the thousands of little hits from football.…
In an everyday game of contact sports a variety of things can happen to an athlete, however, it’s how you deal with those “things” that counts. A concussion on an athlete can be fatal if not treated properly and diligently. An approximate 60 tackles are made in a single football game, but it only takes one to possibly change an athlete’s life forever.…
On March 15, 2016 the National Football League became aware of a link between playing football and the brain disease known as CTE. Jeff Miller, the National Football League’s senior vice president for health and safety, told the House of Representatives’ Committee on Energy and Commerce that head trauma caused by football can trigger brain disease. The scientists know that CTE is the result from head trauma, but there is so much about it they do not know yet. (Breslow)…
The NFL (National football league), a standout amongst the most watched games on the planet and is famous for the aggressiveness of the game. This sport is played by two groups of 11 players each on a rectangular, 100-yard-long field with objective lines and goal posts at either end, the objective being to pick up ownership of a ball and propel it in running or passing plays over the rival's objective line or kick it through the air between the adversary's goalposts. Despite the fact that this game is generally supported by the public it seems to come with the dangers of wounds and injuries. One of the most common injuries in the game is when a player his hit with a violent shock to the head resulting in a wound on the brain. This injury has…
The alarming effects of Concussions in the NFL has become a major topic of discussion with a wide variety of opinions from medical professionals, NFL representatives, academic institutions and Anti-NFL advocates. While there has been action taken on behalf of the NFL, some believe that these actions still aren’t enough and that the complete mitigation of concussions has yet to be addressed. There has been many new outlets and sports forums that have called out Roger Goodell and the NFL on their continuous practice of masking the true dangers of head trauma. The New York Times published an expose that revealed that the “NFL omitted 100 diagnosed concussions from its supposedly all-encompassing study from 1996-2001, which understated the risks…
A concussion, also known as a mild traumatic brain injury, results from a blow to the head (“NFL Head Injuries”). The concussion epidemic, an ever rising problem in sports today, has become very prominent, especially in the NFL. With the new research that has surfaced in the last couple years, the NFL has received grief for not doing enough about concussions and their risks after the fact. The NFL has not done enough on the topic of concussions considering the fact that the league still continues to face problems.…
Concussions is a minor traumatic brain injury that may occur when the head hits an object. Every year about 2 million people are assessed in the emergency room after sustaining a concussion (traumatic brain injury) and about 6 thousands of them die. Concussion has become very common in every level among young adults, soldiers and Athletes and is consider one of the most dangerous injuries. In recent years, concussions have been getting more attention from medical doctors, media and medical team trainers around the world due to the negative effects and impacts it causes. In each, articles writers used patients’ cases to understand concussion better and the treatments for each patient. This paper will explore a series of questions that lead…
In 2012 through 2014 NFL regular season (week one through sixteen), there were a total of 292 reported concussions.”(7)Delaney, J Scott et al. "The effect of protective headgear on head injuries and concussions in adolescent football (soccer) players." “The amount of pressure is immense,” says Wheatley, now director of the Dallas Cowboys football Academy “ I did what I had to do. I play with a broken foot, broken wrist, concussion. I didn't want to lose my spot to another player.”(2) “Many players will just ‘shake it off’ or play through the dizziness and nausea.”(2) If players continue to play through the symptoms they can develop Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy also known as CTE. CTE is a degenerative disease found in the brains of many athletes. “Recently the department of Veterans Affairs and Boston University researchers studied the brains of 165 people who play football in high school, college or pro level. The teams found CTE in 130 of them. Of the brains studied 91 of them belong to former NFL players, 87 of those 91 had signs of…
Recent studies show that football players are likely to have brain trauma and will be affected in the long run. Because of the abnormal buildup of protein in the brain, it causes the tissue to be degenerated. Although brain trauma can become a problem for anyone at any time, football is a push for the problem. One of the common effects on the brain is chronic traumatic encephalopathy, which is the loss of memory, emotional and aggression control. After all, football should be banned from high school sports because chronic traumatic encephalopathy is not worth anyone's life, stress is brought upon families because of their concern, and the health risk makes it worth the process.…
It is only now that we have begun to realize the severity of concussions and the effect they have on the lives of athletes. Players must play the game. They must not try to ruin our lives or the lives of the opponent through brain impact.…
Concussions as a result of high impact sports are something that can affect a person for life. The text states, “several former football players all found to have CTE and have committed suicide and hundreds more continue to suffer from irreversible brain damage” this evidence is important because it shows that many kids who have had major concussions can be suffering with something…
After researching the relevance and austerity of a concussion, Helmy, Agarwal and Hutchinson make a riveting statement. Writing in the journal, Concussion and Sport, they agree that “People experiencing symptoms and signs of a concussion should not continue or be allowed to return to play until these problems are resolved” (10). Concussions is major cause of death and disability in the United States, contributing to about 30% of all injury deaths. Every day, 138 people in the United States die from injuries that include significant trauma to the brain. Those who survive can face effects lasting a few days to disabilities which may last a lifetime (CDC).…
An estimated 300,000 sports related traumatic brain injuries, of mild to moderate severity, most of which can be classified as concussions, (i.e., conditions of temporary altered mental status as a result of head trauma, occur in the United States each year. The proportion of these concussions that are repeat injuries is unknown; however, there is an increased risk for subsequent traumatic brain injuries among persons who have had at least one previous traumatic brain injury. In today’s competitive sports environment, large numbers of athletes participate in a wide variety of youth, high school, collegiate, professional, and recreational sports.(2) Whereas some sports (eg, football) have maintained a consistent number of participants, others have increasing participation. For the…
In sport, specialization is key to an athlete who desires to excel in their preferred sport. Yet on the other hand, when an athlete chooses to specialize they sacrifice the risk of injury, psychological burnout, and the idea is it truly worth it to specialize. By definition sports specialization is when an athlete devotes at least eight months of the year training, and only participates in the given sport as well as they would’ve started at a younger age. (Ried, 2017).…