In an effort to reduce contact above the shoulders and lessen the risk of
injury in high school football, the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Football Rules Committee developed a definition for «targeting,» which will be penalized as illegal personal contact.
In an effort to continue minimizing the risk of
injury in high school football, three additional rules will take effect next season to address helmets coming off players» heads during games.
Not exact matches
Unfortunately, the
highest rates of
injuries in football occur
in high school athletes.
Dr. R. Dean Coddington, a child psychiatrist
in New Orleans, and a team of researchers say that serious
injuries to
high school football players have a definite relationship to the degree of discord
in the player's family.
INDIANAPOLIS,
IN (February 12, 2007)-- In its continuing emphasis on illegal helmet - to - helmet contact in high school football such as spearing, the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head injuries, such, as concussions, in the spor
IN (February 12, 2007)-- In its continuing emphasis on illegal helmet - to - helmet contact in high school football such as spearing, the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head injuries, such, as concussions, in the spor
IN (February 12, 2007)--
In its continuing emphasis on illegal helmet - to - helmet contact in high school football such as spearing, the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head injuries, such, as concussions, in the spor
In its continuing emphasis on illegal helmet - to - helmet contact in high school football such as spearing, the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head injuries, such, as concussions, in the spor
In its continuing emphasis on illegal helmet - to - helmet contact
in high school football such as spearing, the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head injuries, such, as concussions, in the spor
in high school football such as spearing, the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head injuries, such, as concussions, in the spor
in high school football such as spearing, the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head injuries, such, as concussions, in the sp
high school football such as spearing, the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head injuries, such, as concussions, in the
school football such as spearing, the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head injuries, such, as concussions, in th
football such as spearing, the National Federation of State
High School Associations (NFHS) Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head injuries, such, as concussions, in the sp
High School Associations (NFHS) Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head injuries, such, as concussions, in the
School Associations (NFHS)
Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head injuries, such, as concussions, in th
Football Rules Committee reorganized and clarified several rules with the intention of further reducing the risk of head
injuries, such, as concussions,
in the spor
in the spor
in the sport.
Modeled on the community - centric approach to improving youth sports safety highlighted
in MomsTEAM's PBS documentary, «The Smartest Team: Making
High School Football Safer», the program will award SmartTeam status to youth sports organizations which have demonstrated a commitment to minimizing the risk of physical, psychological and sexual
injury to young athletes by implementing a comprehensive set of health and safety best practices, providing safety - conscious sports parents a level of assurance that they have made health and safety an important priority, not to be sacrificed at the altar of team or individual success.
«THE SMARTEST TEAM» begins where other concussion documentaries leave off, not simply identifying the risks of long - term brain
injury in football but offering youth and
high school programs across the country specific ways to minimize those risks, through a focus on what de Lench calls the «Six Pillars» of a comprehensive concussion risk management program:
The critical importance of hydration for athletes was highlighted by the National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research's Annual Survey of
Football Injuries (1), which reported 5 heat - related deaths among high school football players in 2011, but only one
Football Injuries (1), which reported 5 heat - related deaths among
high school football players in 2011, but only one
football players
in 2011, but only one
in 2012.
When I finally had a chance to speak, we were already running over the 2 1/2 hours allotted for the roundtable, so I was only able to briefly touch on two of my many message points: one, that the game can be and is being made safer, and two, that, based on my experience following a
high school football team
in Oklahoma this past season - which will be the subject of a MomsTEAM documentary to be released
in early 2013 called The Smartest Team - I saw the use of hit sensors
in football helmets as offering an exciting technological «end around» the problem of chronic under - reporting of concussions that continues to plague the sport and remains a major impediment,
in my view, to keeping kids safe (the reasons: if an athlete is allowed to keep playing with a concussion, studies show that their recovery is likely to take longer, and they are at increased risk of long - term problems (e.g. early dementia, depression, more rapid aging of the brain, and
in rare cases, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, and
in extremely rare instances, catastrophic
injury or death.)
First featured
in the Institute's long - running PBS documentary, The Smartest Team: Making
High School Football Safer, the Six Pillars ® program, is designed to reduce the risk of concussions and long - term
injury from repetitive head impacts while minimizing the effects of concussion
in young female and male athletes.
All of us involved
in youth sports - from parents, to coaches, from athletic trainers to
school athletic directors to the athletes themselves - have a responsibility to do what we can to make contact and collision sports safer, whether it by reducing the number of hits to the head a player receives over the course of a season (such as N.F.L. and the Ivy League are doing
in limiting full - contact practices, and the Sports Legacy Institute recently proposed be considered at the youth and
high school level
in its Hit Count program), teaching
football players how to tackle without using their head (as former pro
football player Bobby Hosea has long advocated), changing the rules (as the governing body for
high school hockey
in Minnesota did
in the aftermath of the Jack Jablonski
injury or USA Hockey did
in banning body checks at the Pee Wee level), or giving serious consideration to whether athletes below a certain age should be playing tackle
football at all (as the American Academy of Pediatrics recommend).
Sadly, the fact is that, while they are one of the most - if not, the most - preventable of all catastrophic sports
injuries, heat - related deaths among
high school and college
football players
in the United States nearly tripled between 1994 and 2009, according to a new study by researchers at the University of Georgia, with an average of nearly three players dying each year during that time period versus about one death per year during the previous 15 years.
November 4, 2011 — As the
high school football season heads into the playoff stretch and upcoming winter sports season begins The Pennsylvania Athletic Trainers» Society (PATS), announced today that it has partnered with Sport Safety International; a medical consulting firm that specializes
in providing expert advice
in the area of sport safety and
injury prevention, to help introduce «Concussion Wise ™» an online concussion education program designed for athletic trainers, coaches, parents, athletes and other health care professionals.
The NFL, NCAA and National Federation of State
High School Associations have each studied head and neck
injuries and generated rules to try to cut down on top - of - the - head contact
in football.
August 4, 2011 — As the
high school football season gets underway this week
in Florida, the Athletic Trainers» Association of Florida (ATAF) announced today it has forged a relationship with Sport Safety International; a medical consulting firm that specializes
in providing expert advice
in the area of sport safety and
injury prevention, to help introduce «Concussion Wise ™» an online concussion education program designed for athletic trainers, coaches, parents, athletes and other health care professionals.
Despite an increase
in media attention, as well as national and local efforts to educate athletes on the potential dangers of traumatic brain
injuries, a new study found that many
high school football players are not concerned about the long - term effects of concussions and don't report their own concussion symptoms because they fear exclusion from play.
High school athletes still suffer far more serious head injuries playing football and ice hockey than soccer, according to a study by RIO, which tracks concussion rates in high school spo
High school athletes still suffer far more serious head
injuries playing
football and ice hockey than soccer, according to a study by RIO, which tracks concussion rates
in high school spo
high school sports.
If you go to a college or
high school football game, you'll see dedicated athletes giving their all
in a pastime that
in some cases, unfortunately, leads to tragic
injuries.
Head
injuries in youth and
high school football pose daunting challenges, ones that sensational media coverage has many parents believing are insurmountable.
The Smartest Team begins where other concussion documentaries leave off, not simply identifying the risks of long - term brain
injury in football but offering youth and
high school programs across the country specific ways to minimize those risks, through a focus on what de Lench calls the «Six PillarsTM» of a comprehensive concussion risk management program:
At the same time, though, courts have refused to apply the defense of assumption of risk when educators failed to provide adequate supervision such as where a competitor
in a track and field meet was struck by an errant discus while standing
in a safe zone; a student was injured during an indoor (American)
football practice when he slipped on a wet gym floor where coaches failed to provide proper supervision or after another player was injured due to the lack of supervision at a practice; coaches did not warn a student sufficiently about the dangers of diving into a pool; coaches conducted a track practice
in a
high school hallway that unreasonably increased a student's risk of
injury; and a coach lacked enough experience to provide adequate supervision to avoid
injury to a cheerleader.
Are worries about head
injuries responsible for a small but steady decline
in the number of student athletes playing
high school football?
In the past week, another report of hazing that resulted in a serious injury has emerged, only this incident involves a high school football team rather than a college fraternit
In the past week, another report of hazing that resulted
in a serious injury has emerged, only this incident involves a high school football team rather than a college fraternit
in a serious
injury has emerged, only this incident involves a
high school football team rather than a college fraternity.
The jury awarded $ 11.5 million to the student who sustained severe brain
injuries during a
high school football practice
in 2008.