The Columbus Dispatch

NFL, union agree to enhance areas in player health

- By Barry Wilner

NEW YORK — The NFL and the players’ union have two new agreements to address player health in the areas of pain management/ prescripti­on medication­s, and behavior well-being.

The joint agreements, announced Monday, are designed to lead to advancemen­t and understand­ing of dealing with pain and to improve potential treatments. The league and union also will add to programs already establishe­d in education, prevention, and overall behavioral health throughout the league.

“I was hired two years ago and when I was hired I was asked about areas of concern,” said Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL’S medical chief. “And I said these were two areas I saw from my knowledge of someone taking care of athletes for over two decades. I felt a real need there.

“We’ve been working together with the players’ union to come up with something that would work proactivel­y for both. We have the same goal, to take care of the whole player and in a holistic way, and to focus on prevention.”

Among the stipulatio­ns in the pain management area will be formation of a committee of medical experts appointed by the league and union that will establish uniform standards for club practices and policies in pain management and the use of prescripti­on medication by players. The committee also will conduct research concerning pain management and alternativ­e therapies.

That committee will receive periodic reports from a newly developed prescripti­on drug monitoring program that will monitor all prescripti­ons issued to NFL players by club physicians and unaffiliat­ed physicians.

Each NFL club must appoint and pay for a pain management specialist before next season.

All this builds on the programs in place.

All 32 teams now must retain by the start of training camp a behavioral health team clinician focused on supporting players’ emotional and mental health and well-being. The old bromide of “toughing it out” when someone has such issues has long been discarded, Sills said.

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