Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
1908 cartoon (by W.C. Morris) highlighting the dangers that were associated with the sport. Concussions are frequent injuries among football players. Concussions occur when the head is subject to a large impact force, resulting in a minor brain injury. There has been a growing concern about concussions since the early 1900s.
The study found that, as reported by athletic trainers, college football players sustain 6.3 concussions for every 10,000 athletic exposures (meaning an individual practice or game), and the rate for high school football players is 11.2. The high school concussion figure is nearly double that of the next-highest sport, lacrosse. The study ...
Minutes of an FA meeting in 1983 indicate it was "aware of the dangers" of concussion in football, say former players.
College football also has lower concussion rates than women's hockey, with a rate of 2.34 per 1,000. [27] Women's basketball is one of the women's sports with the highest risks of getting a concussion. Women have a greater risk of getting a concussion by dribbling/ball handling rather than defending.
A recent U.S. study has revealed that a longer football career may not lead to more concussions -- but playing certain positions will. Brain damage from football concussions varies by position and ...
It isn't the first time the 26-year-old has left the field with a head injury; the latest was the third concussion Tagovailoa has been diagnosed with during his five-year National Football League ...
Yet, football's viewership has never been better. The post Even after seeing the effects of concussions in real time, football fans still can’t look away appeared first on TheGrio.
After undergoing a head-to-head hit at football practice, a university nurse practitioner diagnosed Plevretes with a concussion and two days later was told he was allowed to resume play. Three games after returning Plevretes sustained another concussion resulting in second-impact syndrome.