Toronto Star

NFL to hire chief medical officer

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NEW YORK— The NFL will be hiring a full-time chief medical officer to work with team medical staffs, the players’ union and league committees.

In a letter sent to the 32 team presidents and obtained by The Associated Press on Wednesday, NFL commission­er Roger Goodell said the chief medical officer also would work with “the broader independen­t scientific and medical communitie­s.”

The new hire will replace Dr. Elliot Pellman, who is retiring after 30 years in the league, and will have expanded duties.

Pellman mostly played an administra­tive role that included communicat­ion with NFL clubs regarding health and safety protocols. Pellman was not a member of any league medical committee.

But much of the early criticism of the NFL regarding its handling of concussion­s was directed at Pellman, who once famously downplayed links between head trauma and football.

Pellman is a rheumatolo­gist with little expertise in head and brain trauma research, but he was involved in the formulatio­n of the NFL’s concussion policies.

Goodell also told the teams that the NFL must demonstrat­e strong leadership on health and safety.

“In recognitio­n of this priority (on player health and safety) and the increasing complexity of our work, we intend to hire a highly credential­ed physician to serve as chief medical officer and work in the league office on a full-time basis,” Goodell wrote.

A search will begin this week and will be conducted by a panel of health and medical experts led by Dr. Betsy Nabel, the league’s chief health and medical adviser.

While the NFL has been heavily criticized in its handling of head trauma over the decades, Goodell has tried to emphasize the progress made in several health and safety areas. Those include 42 rules changes to protect players, millions of dollars spent in medical research, and more mandatory protective equipment.

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