Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

That’ll get attention

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Assembly members Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher, D-San Diego, and Kevin McCarty, D-Sacramento, have introduced legislatio­n that would ban organized tackle football in California until high school. This will certainly draw ferocious pushback from football fans, those who think government shouldn’t micromanag­e family decisions and the vast majority of adults who enjoyed playing the sport growing up and didn’t end up with brain damage. But in a nation in which more than 2 million kids play in youth football leagues, the lawmakers have identified a genuine public health issue that demands attention.

The case of Tyler Cornell illustrate­s why. His mother, Jo Cornell of Rancho Bernardo, is one of two California mothers suing the Pop Warner youth football organizati­on. Her son loved football, but Cornell believes that the chronic traumatic encephalop­athy (CTE) found in his brain after he became depressed and committed suicide at age 25 contribute­d to his death. He played football from when he was 8 to 17 but was never diagnosed with a concussion, a sign that the cumulative effects of the brain being jarred by relatively minor hits can wreak the same long-term harm as tackles involving savage blows to the head. A Wake Forest School of Medicine study of the brains of 8- to 13-year-old boys who played football—none of whom suffered concussion­s—found changes associated with brain injuries.

This is not to say ban football now and forever. It’s to say that for all the newfound awareness about concussion­s— leading to protocols being establishe­d from leagues for 5-year-olds to the NFL— coaches, parents and players still need to understand the risks better. Even if Gonzalez Fletcher’s and McCarty’s bill never advances out of committee, if it promotes a better understand­ing of youth brain injuries, then it will have had a positive effect.

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