Boston Herald

Youth sports safety during coronaviru­s pandemic

- — trIbune neWs serVICe

Besides the obvious physical benefits, youth sports provide social interactio­n that also can strengthen mental health. But most sports require close contact and interactio­n among athletes. Amid the COVID-19 setting, this poses a dilemma.

The youth sports playing field has changed significan­tly in 2020.

“Sports do require oftentimes close contact, sharing of equipment and other things that do pose risks. How do we do that in the safest way possible I think is the million-dollar question,” said Dr. David Soma, a Mayo Clinic pediatrici­an who specialize­s in sports medicine.

Soma says sports provide valuable mental and physical benefits for kids, but the COVID-19 pandemic is a whole new ballgame.

“If we are going to have kids play sports, we need to really strongly encourage a lot of those social safety measures: social distancing, hand hygiene, masking when possible.”

He also recommends screening athletes for COVID-19 symptoms before practices and games. And if an athlete has recovered from COVID-19, “there’s a lot of discussion right now about the potential developmen­t of heart complicati­ons following COVID-19 infection, and that when they go back to sports, there could be a risk. I think that we need to just be monitoring that very carefully,” Soma said.

Soma says limiting the number of people at events and masking everyone on the sidelines and in the stands is also important.

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