Iran Daily

Laws to protect athletes’ brains do reduce concussion­s

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To guard against the dangers of concussion­s, by 2014, all 50 states and the District of Columbia had enacted laws to protect young athletes. More than 2½ years after these laws went on the books, repeat concussion­s began to decline among high school athletes, researcher­s reported in the American Journal of Public Health.

Researcher­s reviewed concussion data from 2005 to 2016 collected in an online system for sports injuries from a nationally representa­tive sample of US high schools, sciencenew­s.org reported.

An estimated nearly 2.7 million reported concussion­s occurred during that time — an annual average of 39.8 concussion­s per 100,000 times a player hit the field for practice or games — among athletes in nine sports: Football, basketball, soccer, baseball or wrestling for boys, and basketball, soccer, softball and volleyball for girls.

Overall, the rate of new and recurrent concussion­s was climbing before the implementa­tion of traumatic brain injury laws and continued to rise immediatel­y after.

But then, nearly three years after the laws went into effect, the rate of recurrent concussion­s dropped roughly 10 percent, the authors said.

New concussion­s showed a slight downturn beginning nearly four years post-law.

Most of the new laws require education on symptoms and signs of concussion­s for athletes, coaches and parents.

So greater awareness of symptoms rather than an actual uptick in injuries may be behind the initial increase in reported concussion­s in the post-statute period.

And the drop in recurrent concussion­s may be due to the laws’ provisions that take athletes off the field after a concussion and keep them off until approved by a medical provider.

While the trends suggest that laws are having an impact, the researcher­s said, measures that focus on preventing concussion­s — not only taking steps after they happen — are needed.

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MEHR NEWS AGENCY

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