The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

NFL, 4 HBCUS to increase diversity in sports medicine

Students able to do clinical rotation with Falcons, 7 other teams.

- By D. Orlando Ledbetter dledbetter@ajc.com

The NFL, along with the NFL Physicians Society and the Profession­al Football Athletic Trainer Society, will start a program with four Historical­ly Black Colleges and Universiti­es medical schools, including the Morehouse School of Medicine, to increase diversity in the sports medicine field and within the league’s 32 teams.

Eight teams, including the Falcons, will take part in the initiative, which will provide medical students a clinical rotation with NFL teams’ medical staffs during the 2022 season.

“What excites me about this program is it’s not just the benefit for the NFL, but the benefit for medicine as a whole,” said Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL’S chief medical officer. “What we’re trying to help address here is not just an NFL problem, it’s really something that’s widespread across medicine and that’s a lack of diversity.”

Medical students from Morehouse School of Medicine, Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science, Howard University College of Medicine and Meharry Medical College will be selected by their schools to complete onemonth clinical rotations with NFL teams. The program will start with 16 students — two students each with the Falcons, Cincinnati Bengals, Los Angeles Chargers, Los Angeles Rams, New York Giants, San Francisco 49ers, Tennessee Titans and Washington Commanders.

In 2023, the program will expand to recruit students from additional academic institutio­ns and medical discipline­s and place those students with medical staffs at more NFL clubs.

“The NFL can be proactivel­y part of the solution,” Sills said. “So, while you know this will benefit us, I think there’s going to be such a broader benefit beyond just the NFL.

“Hopefully this is just one step. We have a number of other initiative­s and plans in progress. But this is one that I think we can point to as a really tangible, positive thing.”

The NFL expects the program to include all 32 team medical staffs in the future.

Dr. Hugh Mighty, the dean of Howard’s College of Medicine and senior vice president of health affairs, said there is a high level of interest in sports medicine among his student body. “The benefit for us is that’s it’s another pipeline,” Mighty said. “We’re exploring as many avenues as we can to get minority Black physicians into more roles than have been previously open to them.”

Most doctors train in family medicine or orthopedic surgery before entering sports medicine, according to Mighty. “Then you discover what sports medicine is all about when you meet teams,” Mighty said. “Here, we’re given an opportunit­y for early exposure to learn.”

“If you think about the makeup of the NFL, the NBA, so many of those athletes are Black athletes,” Mighty said. “The physicians, the health-care providers have become, not role models, but sometimes they can help people with health. Not just fixing your joints, but taking better care of themselves and their families.”

Dr. Timothy Mcadams, head physician for the 49ers and president of the NFL Physicians Society, said “when you specifical­ly look at our physicians society, we only have 5% Black members, and that doesn’t come close to mirroring the athletes that we treat. NFL players are over 70% Black, so we need to be better.”

The first-year students will be surveyed at the end of the medical rotations. “It’s going to be very important to gather with each of these 16 students afterward to get their feedback,” Mcadams said. “We’re going to lean heavily on their experience, their exposure, their recommenda­tions and how to improve it as we work to expand it in the future.”

The NFL also hopes the program will highlight that there are many more careers that are a part of sports medicine.

“We recognize that it’s orthopedic surgery, but it’s also primary care, sports medicine,” Sills said. “Then when you look beyond physicians, you’ve got athletic trainers, and you’ve got strength-and-conditioni­ng coaches, performanc­e specialist­s and sports scientists and nutritioni­sts, the behavioral health clinicians, literally, sports-medicine department­s.”

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