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Traumatic Brain Injury In Sports

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“From 2001 to 2009, the annual number of sports-related TBI emergency department visits in individuals age 19 and under climbed from 153,375 to 248,414, an increase of increase of 62 percent” (Lowrey and Morain 290). A Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) or Concussion in most cases is when there is a severe blow to the brain. Not all TBIs are the same and not all of them can be treated the same, but what they do have in common is that they changes lives negatively and should be address accordingly. Americans should give more attention to the issue of Traumatic Brain Injuries in sports because it takes more time than a regular injury for symptoms to reside, players usually do not come back the same, and could possibly lead other medical issues. …show more content…

Affected athletes should go through mandatory physical therapy and it should be required until the athlete is back where he or she left off. Not many concussion test are valid, according to the author, “...respondents bemoaned the lack of specificity in their respective laws as to which types of providers may make RTP assessments, leading to continued uncertainty about whether a particular provider’s evaluation is valid”(Lowrey and Morain 294). The recovery process from an injury this serious should be the focal point of the whole process. If the recovery process is rushed or lazily attended to, other serious issues could …show more content…

These accusations are true yet debatable, according to the author, “Increasing knowledge of these health risks has spurred a series of initiatives to increase awareness and to decrease the prevalence and severity of sports-related concussions”(Lowrey and Morain 290). Meaning, if athletes focus more on their surroundings, it is less likely they will be a victim of a dreadful TBI. Doing this may actually decrease the number of concussions annually along with proper

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