• Football helmet grants
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  • Ex-teammate: Seau suffered 1,500 concussions; donates brain
  • Former NFL player Coy Wire on concussions: create a new norm
  • CTE and Alzheimer's; different diseases
  • Junior Seau's former agent reflects on his death
  • NFL draft highlights concussion issues
  • Brain wiring a no-brainer? (video)

First look at Massachusetts' high school concussion rates

Massachusetts' new concussion law requires middle and high schools to keep track of the number of head injuries -- including concussions -- suffered by students, and report them to the Department of Public Health. 

A Boston Globe survey of 26 area high schools found 338 head injuries in fall sports at the top athletic programs in the state.  Not surprisingly, football accounted for 207 of the injuries. Female soccer players reported almost twice the number as boys, 85 compared to 46. 

The numbers combine all levels of sports from freshman to junior varsity and varsity teams.

Missouri released the results of their head injury survey several weeks ago.  There were an estimated 1,100 head injuries, of which 871 were classified as concussions, reported in fall sports statewide, including spirit groups and bands.  Seventy-four percent of the schools responded to the survey including 240 high schools.

Passed in 2010, Massachusetts' concussion law requires annual training for parents, athletes and staff.  Athletes must be removed from activity if a concussion is suspected and are not allowed to return to play without written medical authorization.  

All public middle and high schools as well as any schools subject to Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association (MIAA) rules are required to report the number of head injuries at the end of the school year.  Parents are asked to report any off-campus head injuries to the school.

Dr. Robert Cantu, clinical professor of neurosurgery at Boston University's School of Medicine told the Globe that the MIAA numbers seem typical, but cautions that for every diagnosed football-related concussion he estimates there are six to eight that go unreported.


Source:  Knowing the Score on Concussions -- The Boston Globe  February 19, 2012

Questions/comments?  contact Jean Rickerson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

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