#1
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Head injuries in sport
Fascinating, if not troubling, study here:
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/...T.nav=top-news "Dr. Ann McKee, a neuropathologist, has examined the brains of 202 deceased football players. A broad survey of her findings was published on Tuesday in The Journal of the American Medical Association. Of the 202 players, 111 of them played in the N.F.L. — and 110 of those were found to have chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or C.T.E., the degenerative disease believed to be caused by repeated blows to the head. C.T.E. causes myriad symptoms, including memory loss, confusion, depression and dementia. The problems can arise years after the blows to the head have stopped. The brains here are from players who died as young as 23 and as old as 89. And they are from every position on the field — quarterbacks, running backs and linebackers, and even a place-kicker and a punter." |
#2
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The study is very troubling but CTE has been known for years and denied by the NFL until only recently.
My wife and I started watching the movie Concussion last night. Will Smith does an excellent job and the script is well written. Worth the time to watch.
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Life is short-enjoy every day. |
#3
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my dad was born in Scotland in 1908. He played soccer as a kid and retired as a professional in 1948. He headed many heavy wet leather balls and probably had a few concussions from on-field collisions. He died at 81 having suffered from increasing dementia in his later years. We assumed it was Alzheimer's but these new studies make me think Dad's problem may have been a result of many hits to his head. I like that idea because head hits aren't hereditary. I hope.
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#4
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Deeply troubling. I've come to think that because football rewards really large players and immensely powerful hits, it is equivalent to a blood sport. I question if it should be allowed to exist in its current form. I would abolish it if I were writing the rules, but I'm an extremist.
Not sure what can be done to ameliorate the damage in football. If rubgy is safer, then diverting players to rugby may help young men in general. Cycling is far from exempt. Remember Chris Horner in the 2011 TDF? I am thinking something like mandatory exams for riders who crash, mandatory withdrawal if they have any level of concussion, liberalize rider replacement rules. Consider allowing crashed riders to skip one stage under some conditions (e.g. easy days). |
#5
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Football has pretty much always killed people.
But the on-field deaths during the Teddy Roosevelt era have been replaced with something happening much further in the future. |
#6
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Did the study have controls and was the examiner "blinded". If not it doesn't necessarily tell you what you think it does.
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#7
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Head injuries in sport
American football will die a slow death imo. Parents are already refusing to allow boys to play as more & more studies confirm CTE. Of course, this is a class situation. Affluent parents weigh the risk and say nope. The less than affluent, who see football as an escape, will in many cases accept/ignore the risk.
I follow the college game & you see this dynamic quite often. White player gets to his 3 rd concussion & he quits, despite a promising continued college career w a shot at the NFL. African American players keep 'living the dream.' https://sports.vice.com/en_us/articl...s-of-black-men Of course I could be wrong, a culture that's traded religion for the Sunday gladiators may find its violence fix too hard to let go of & accept the sports PR campaign - aka smokescreen - to lessen the incidence of CTE. And the Will Smith movie is quite good. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
#8
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There is no doubt that the game has to evolve and make some serious rules changes to make the game safer and limit the number of hits. Can the game survive? I think so.
I heard someone say (it might have been on here) recently that they are much more concerned about the soldiers that fight in our armed services in the name of our nation, and the trauma that they endure, than CTE related injuries to professional (or college) football players. Yes, youth participation is an issue, of course. At the end of the day, the NFL players have a union and a collective bargaining agreement. The science is out there and the risks are (now) well documented -- and the players are reasonably well compensated. If they choose to participate, who am I to say they are wrong, or take away their livelihood? Contrast that to the damage done by alcohol, sugar, opiates, sending people to war, etc... seems that energy would help more people if directed to these more serious problems.
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And we have just one world, But we live in different ones |
#9
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Don't see this ending anytime soon in rural and inner city America. As a public school teacher, I get to accommodate all those concussions that happen during school endorsed and funded sporting events like football, soccer, and lax. Most of them think it's their ticket out of where they are and that brain injuries are just like any other injury. In fact, mental health is barely an after thought here. Most of the student athletes in the sports that seem to cause the most damage to their brains have figured out how to juke the concussion protocols to their "advantage" and they're not even at the college level yet.
But hey there's a solar eclipse coming...! |
#10
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As there is currently no test for living brain matter, this will have to suffice for now. |
#11
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TBI comes from one big hit. Football players may also experience TBI from big hits, but the CTE issue is not analogous to combat. |
#12
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There was a related article out yesterday concerning females in sport closing the gap...
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William |
#13
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Yes, probably the offensive line and defensive line will start standing up, and some rules about leading with your head. You can't remove every head to head contact, but you can move in the right direction. With the technology and understanding today, there should actually be pretty good ways to tell if a rule change is having the desired effect by measuring impacts in the helmet.
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And we have just one world, But we live in different ones |
#14
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That's all they really care about long-term. Player health isn't even a concern for them, outside the realm of the impacts on the future of the business. |
#15
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Pro football is way better managed but eventually the head injuries will be impossible to ignore. It won't happen tomorrow or even in ten years but I think pro football will eventually decline, and massively so. |
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