Research Proposal
Dr. Smith
Introduction: Head injuries are taking a very big toll on those that have long since left the game. The game of football is exciting and most everyone watches on Sundays to see who wins and who loses. Football players are sustaining head injuries in every game and they’re being allowed to return to the field before the injury has a chance to heal. This causes more problems down the road. Many players are being diagnosed with early dementia and memory loss. Others are falling deep into depression. The NFL has assured the players and the fans that precautions are being taken in order to avoid this problem going forward. The real problem is knowing when these players …show more content…
Recent studies have shown that this ever prospering enterprise is running into serious problems and it’s due to concussions or head injuries and a disease known as Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy that can go relatively unnoticed until later in life. Careers are being cut short, and in some cases, lives are at stake. For example, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy is a buildup of a toxic protein called tau and it causes such problems as memory loss, depression, erratic behavior, and emotional instability (see Boston University, 2009; Holbrook, 2009; Health Day News, 2009; Nelson, 2012; Schwartz, 2009). This literature shows the connection between National Football Players and how Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy is caused by repetitive concussive blows to the head. More and more players are being diagnosed with Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy. Eight NFL players who died between the ages of 36 and 52, most exhibiting extreme emotional problems, have been diagnosed as having the condition. It has been found in every player of those ages examined by the two groups doing such research, the Boston University group and another led by Drs. Bennet Omalu and Julian Bailes of the Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute (Schwartz, 2009). The literature further states what the National …show more content…
3 NFL stars to donate brain tissue for trauma research; program studies affects of repeated blows to the head. Last consumer health News (English), Retrieved from: http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE|A207817224&v=2.1&u=oran95108&it=r&p=ITOF&sw=w
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