Upping the ante in dealing with concussions
Rugby players are generally in good hands when it comes to treatment
THE TREATMENT of concussion in rugby is taken more seriously than ever because of a combination of player welfare and a fear that a failure to try to prevent head injuries may come back to haunt the sport as it has done in American football.
But as the British and Irish Lions tour of New Zealand shows, issues can still “slip through the net”.
Both Leigh Halfpenny and Joe Marler have suffered from the after-effects of a concussion, yet failed to be taken off the field during matches for a head injury assessment (HIA).
The incidents raised concerns that despite the introduction of the HIA process, concussions are still not being picked up and dealt with properly.
Dr Eanna Falvey, the team doctor for both Ireland and the Lions, has stressed that while head injuries are being treated properly, there is still room for improvement in identifying and responding to concussions during matches, as the cases involving Halfpenny and Marler show.
Yet he revealed the measures that the Lions were taking on the tour of New Zealand to do all they could to try and limit the prospect of an injured player continuing in a match.
“The whole HIA management is a collaborative event now. I’m not there on my own making a decision about that any more,” Falvey said.
“To fill you in on how that now works, we’ve raised the stakes on how we do this considerably. For all our games, one of our medical team sits in the coaches’ box as a spotter. He has a computerised system where he has got the broadcast feed and he can rewind that.
“So if there’s a bang, or somebody gets a bang, he can look at that for me.
“At the same time I also have access to a system on the sideline, an electronic viewfinder system from New Zealand Rugby, where they have an operator working the system, and I have 12 views where we can look at any impact and decide whether it meets the criteria for an HIA or permanent removal.
“Added to that, you have an independent match-day doctors’ team, which is usually three doctors, who basically are on the sideline reviewing that and watching the game themselves.
“We made a conscious decision before the tour that the independent doctor would do all the HIAs, so basically we removed any implication… that we might be favouring getting guys back on or not.” One incident of note came in the 34-6 victory over the Chiefs that involved both Marler and the secondrow Courtney Lawes.
As they attempted to tackle Chiefs prop Siegfried Fisiihoi, the two clashed heads and Lawes was taken from the field for an HIA, his second in the space of a week after being knocked out in the defeat by the Highlanders, yet Marler remained on the field.
Lawes returned to the field after passing the HIA, but Marler would go on to show signs of concussion after the match and was immediately put into the return-to-play protocols before the first Test.
Falvey admitted there had been a difficulty in assessing players on that tour and informing them that they could continue in the match, given how important the warm-up games were to playing in the Test matches against the All Blacks.
“I’ve had a couple of tough conversations in this tour where players couldn’t go back on and they were extraordinarily disappointed, particularly early in the tour, because they’re missing an opportunity to make their case for a Test position,” he added.
“We have to look after them, we have got to protect players from themselves. So we’ve used the independent match-day doctor to do the HIA for us. It’s a truly independent process, but even with that things get missed.
“In the Joe Marler case, for example, he clashed heads with Courtney Lawes, and we removed Courtney for an HIA which he passed.
“Joe at the time was okay, and the video review doctor and the match-day doctor were quite happy with him staying on.
“However, that evening and the next day, when we reviewed our own video, we could see that Joe had actually got up and fallen to the ground again, and that is a permanent removal criteria.
“There are 10 criteria on the HIA which, if you fulfil any one of those, you aren’t supposed to do an HIA. You are removed with a suspicion of concussion and you go through the graduated return to play.
“So then we moved Joe through a graduated return to play.
“Obviously, that’s not ideal, but you’re in a situation there where, using the best tools that you’ve got available, something slips through the net, but we still found it the next day and made sure we looked after him properly.
“He wasn’t in any contact situation until it was indicated by the graduated return to play.” The problem is that in a game with the physicality levels of rugby, there will always be the potential for concussions no matter how good the team is that is looking out for head injuries.
While the incident with Marler is alarming, more often than not concussions do not slip through the net, and given how far treatment levels have come on since the last Lions tour, the players are in good hands to receive the best protection available. – The Independent.
The whole HIA management is a collobarative event now So if there’s a bang, or somebody gets a bang, he can look at that for me