For immediate
release
May 27, 2009
ACSM
CALLS FOR NATIONAL POLICY ADOPTION FOR CONCUSSION IN YOUTH SPORTS
ACSM, CDC and Brain Injury Association of
Washington partner to advance legislative
success
SEATTLE – A national guideline that young athletes
suspected of sustaining a concussion or head injury in practice or games
be removed from competition until examined or cleared by a medical
professional is at the heart of a multi-organizational call-to-action
announced today at the American College of Sports Medicine
(ACSM) 56th Annual Meeting in
Seattle. ACSM is collaborating with the Brain Injury Association
of Washington (BIAWA) and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) to build national momentum on a new Washington state
law protecting young athletes from death or disability caused by
premature return to play following a concussion.
The Lystedt Law is
named in honor of Zackery Lystedt, a Seattle-area young athlete who
suffered a concussion in 2006 during a middle school football
game. After returning to the same game, he
later collapsed on the field. (See
www.biawa.org for Lystedt’s story.) The
legislation, according to ACSM and its partners, is the standard for a
no-cost, highly protective model for national duplication.
In order to replicate the
characteristics of the Lystedt Law that will protect young athletes in
sports, ACSM says state legislation can work to require:
“This
simple policy – which doesn’t cost a thing for the state or
any school district – will save lives,”
said Stanley A. Herring, M.D., FACSM, Chair of ACSM’s
Clinical Sports Medicine Leadership committee and one of the physicians
involved with Lystedt’s care. “It’s a
win-win-win, for young athletes, for schools and for public
health. The Lystedts have shown us all how one family can prevail
over a devastating injury to affect change that has a real opportunity
to save lives. This will do just that
in Washington, and in every other state that recognizes its
value.”
Concussions (mild
traumatic brain injuries) are one of the most commonly reported injuries
in children and adolescents who participate in sports, generally caused
by a blow or motion to the head or body that causes the brain to move
rapidly inside the skull. The CDC estimates more than three million
concussions occur in the U.S. each year.
Further, concussions are
a type of brain injury that have a range of severity and can have a
multitude of symptoms. In Zackery Lystedt’s case, the
severity of injury was likely aggravated by his continued play after his
concussion.
“The Lystedt
Law here lessens the risk that an athlete is running back onto the field
with an undiagnosed brain or head injury,
becoming all the more susceptible to a catastrophic injury,” said
Richard Adler, President of the Brain Injury Association of
Washington. “This bill is a landmark success in helping make
youth sports safer and preventing preventable
injuries.”
ACSM has a long history
of advocating for concussion management, as well as establishing
resources and partnerships to support treatment and prevention updates
that help coaches and athletes avoid head injuries during play or
competition.
In 2006, ACSM
published Concussion
(Mild Traumatic Brain Injury) and the Team Physician: A Consensus
Statement, a guide to help team physicians diagnose
and treat athletes with a concussion. The primer outlines best
practices in identifying a mild traumatic brain injury; factors that
should be considered in making return-to-play (RTP) decisions; the need
for a game-day medical plan specific to concussions; the need for
documentation, and more.
For more
information on the Lystedt Law in Washington state, please visit www.biawa.org.
The American
College of
Sports Medicine is the largest sports medicine and exercise science
organization in the world. More than 35,000 international, national and
regional members and certified professionals are dedicated to advancing
and integrating scientific research to provide educational and practical
applications of exercise science and sports
medicine.
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