Mrs. Parsons
English 4
May 5, 2017
Sports Concussions When people think of sports the most common thing that comes to anyone mind are professional sports leagues such as the NFL, NBA, MLB, Soccer, NHL, etc. These sports give people entertainment and let youths and teenagers have the best time of their lives and make memories out of them. Athletes are the biggest fans when it comes to sports, because they enjoy what they love doing and see their favorite players doing what they love. With sports and young athletes, there sometimes could be consequences like injuries which could prevent you from doing what you love to do such as sports. The biggest and most common injuries in sports are concussions. What we can do to prevent these …show more content…
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 207,830 trips to an emergency room annually between 2001 and 2005 due to sports participation injuries. In 2010, brain injuries with no hospitalization or loss of consciousness occurred in about 1.5 million people in the United States. In a 2013 report, concussions attributed to sports participation account for an estimated 3.8 million injuries. As a result, educational efforts geared toward parents, participants, coaches, and the community to raise awareness on the symptoms of concussions and the possible lifelong consequences were …show more content…
With this, it can be the most recent international consensus statement on concussion in sport states that "consideration of rule changes to reduce the head injury incidence or severity may be appropriate where a clear-cut mechanism is implicated in a sport, such as a contact sport like Football and Hockey. Recent years have seen stricter enforcement of existing rules and numerous rule changes at the professional, college and high school level, all designed, at least in theory, to reduce the risk of concussion and long-term injury, such as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). For example, in football they are moving kickoffs from the 30 to 35-yard line in the NFL and it showed to reduce concussions by 50 percent. Prohibiting helmet-to-helmet contact and helmet-first hits on defenseless players above the shoulders. This rule is only in the college level and professional level. Some concussion experts are also suggesting new rules be adopted to better protect football players against head