CDC Concussion Toolkits

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are announcing a new multimedia educational toolkit to protect teen athletes from a serious but often underestimated health threat - concussion. Concussions are a type of traumatic brain injury (TBI) caused by a blow or jolt to the head that can range from mild to severe and can disrupt the way the brain normally works. More than 300,000 sports-and recreation-related TBI’s occur in the United States each year.
This initiative, “Heads Up: Concussion in High School Sports,” includes information to prevent concussions and identify symptoms and immediate steps to take when an athlete is showing signs of a concussion.
The centerpiece of the toolkit is a video and DVD featuring a high school football player who was permanently disabled after sustaining a second concussion during a game. This player’s post-injury perspective emphasizes that it’s better to miss one game than to miss the entire season – or the promise of a healthy future. His experience highlights a rare but potentially fatal condition called second-impact syndrome, which occurs when a person who has had a concussion experiences a second blow while the brain is vulnerable. This second blow does not have to be violent or strong for its effects to be deadly or permanently disabling.

 

The toolkit also contains practical, easy-to-use information for coaches, athletic directors and trainers, teens, and parents:

To prevent these life-changing and life-threatening events, coaches, athletic directors, parents and teens should:

Toolkits can be ordered and downloaded free-of-charge online at http://www.cdc.gov/ConcussionInYouthSports/default.htm . For more information about concussions, traumatic brain injury, or injury in general, visit CDC Injury Center’s website at http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/ .