The Province

Concussion­s not duly assessed

Internatio­nal recommenda­tions weren’t followed at 2014 World Cup, study says

- GREGORY STRONG THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — An avid soccer fan, Toronto-based neurosurge­on Dr. Michael Cusimano gets concerned every time he sees a player stay on the pitch after showing symptoms of a head injury.

He decided to explore the issue at the game’s highest level, leading a research team that systematic­ally examined the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil. The results, published online Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n, indicated internatio­nal recommenda­tions for assessing whether an athlete had suffered a concussion were not followed at the tournament.

“The concussion­s primarily occur with player-to-player contact in the vast majority of cases,” Cusimano said. “Our point with this is very simple. If somebody sustains something, they should be properly assessed. It should ideally be a doctor that properly assesses them. “It’s a very simple message.” The findings also left Cusimano, who’s based at St. Michael’s Hospital, concerned about the potential trickle-down effect on fans and young players involved in the sport.

“They set the tone for the culture,” he said of FIFA, world soccer’s governing body. “Let’s face it. When they have viewership­s of over a billion people ... it’s a global phenomenon.”

Cusimano led his team in reviewing videotapes of all 64 games from the quadrennia­l tournament. Researcher­s found that concerning head collisions occurred on 72 occasions and affected 81 players.

Fourteen players (17 per cent) showed no sign or one sign of a concussion, 45 players (56 per cent) had two signs and 22 players (27 per cent) exhibited three or more signs, the review found. Among players with three or more signs, 19 (86 per cent) returned to play in the same game after an average assessment of just 84 seconds.

“The players deserve proper assessment,” Cusimano said. “As a physician, I care about the health of the player. To make a proper assessment is a cornerston­e of managing people.”

Consensus statements from the 2012 and 2016 Internatio­nal Conference on Concussion in Sports say a sports-related concussion may have a range of clinical symptoms. They include physical signs and cognitive impairment like headache, feeling like being in a fog, loss of consciousn­ess, an unsteady gait and slowed reaction times.

Conference guidelines, which were adopted by FIFA, say that players showing any signs of concussion should be immediatel­y withdrawn from play and assessed by sideline health-care officials, the review said.

Researcher­s found the average assessment at the World Cup lasted 107 seconds and that 45 of the players (56 per cent) were assessed by another player, referee or health-care personnel on the field, while 21 players (26 per cent) received no assessment.

“Most of these assessment­s — even by the health-care personnel — are extremely short in duration and don’t really meet the bar that a proper assessment would meet,” Cusimano said.

“The longest assessment we saw was 180 seconds,” Cusimano said. “So they need to be properly assessed is what we’re saying. We’re not saying every single event is a concussion.

“We’re saying that they should just be properly assessed.”

The longtime neurosurge­on also recommende­d that independen­t physicians be authorized to make concussion assessment­s and have the final say on whether an athlete can play. He added that would eliminate the possibilit­y of team employees making decisions, since their jobs may be at risk if they make unpopular calls.

Cusimano said team physicians may have reported only the most obvious and severe head injuries, while players may have under-reported their symptoms to avoid losing playing time.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? John Boye of Ghana, left, and Thomas Mueller of Germany receive treatment during the 2014 World Cup. A study found most assessment­s were too short.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES John Boye of Ghana, left, and Thomas Mueller of Germany receive treatment during the 2014 World Cup. A study found most assessment­s were too short.

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