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2010 Massachusetts Health Advisory

What schools are covered by this new law?

The law specifically states that public and other schools subject to MIAA rules are required to participate.  However, because sports related head injuries and concussions can have such serious consequences for students, including long term health and educational issues if they are not properly managed, the Department strongly encourages all schools whose students engage in extracurricular athletics to include these trainings as part of their athletic programs. The decision about when an athlete is cleared to return to play falls upon the student's physician.  This decision is sometimes made in consultation with the concussion specialist.

 

Who needs to participate in a Sports Head Injury and Concussions Awareness Course?

The law says that the following people must participate in this training program: 

·        Coaches

·        Athletic trainers

·        Parent volunteers for any extracurricular athletic activity

·        Physicians employed by the school or who volunteer for any extracurricular athletic activity

·        School nurses or nurses who volunteer for any extracurricular athletic activity

·        Athletic Directors

·        School marching band directors


CLICK LINK ABOVE TO LOG ON FOR MASS MANDATED TRAINING

 

Return-to-Play - When should an athlete return to competition?                                   

 

There are no hard and fast rules for when athletes are permitted to return to the sport they love aside from the accepted practice that "same game" returns are strongly discouraged. It was previously thought that athletes could return to play if they had only received a grade 1 concussion and they quickly returned to baseline.  This is no longer the standard of care for concussion management.  The grading system is less emphasized than previously and individual athletes are measured using sideline tests that measure cognitive functions such as concentration, memory, and orientation.

 

Return to play should be carefully managed by the team physician and trainer.  No player should go from zero percent play to 100 percent play without monitored, "symptom free" exertion.  In the context of youth sports, CAMP offers preseason training and support to coaches, parents, and players about concussion and the consequences of returning to the game before being fully healed.  As with other medical history, it is a good idea to have an idea which athletes may be more vulnerable to concussion before competition begins.  Returning to play after concussion requires a stepwise process that monitors athletes at each phase of their return.  Athletes are followed during recovery with exertional testing and should not play if they are at all symptomatic.  In cases where no physician or trainer are available coaches and parents often supervise the specific exertion protocol outlined by the physician or concussion specialist.  A specific return to play protocol outlining gradual increase in activity has been established by the Concussion in Sport Group as follows (Aubry, Cantu, Dvorak, Graf-Baumann, Johnston, Kelly, Lovell, McCrory, Meeuwise, Schasmasch, 2001. Clinical J. Sports Med.)Lacrosse player
  • Rest
  • Aerobic exercise (.e.g., stationary bicycle)
  • Sport Specific training (e.g., running, skating)
  • Non-contact drills (includes cutting and other lateral movements)
  • Full-contact controlled training
  • Full-contact game play

CDC Heads Up - Facts for Physicians U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services

 

 

 

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