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For immediate release
Aug. 19, 2009
YOUNG ATHLETES AT RISK FOR
HEAT ILLNESS AS FALL SPORTS BEGIN
Prevention strategies should extend beyond just football,
researchers say
INDIANAPOLIS – As the start of another school year looms and
practices for fall sports begin, young athletes – and not just
football players – are challenged by the hot weather and face
significant heat injury and illness risks, say experts from the
American College of
Sports Medicine (ACSM).
Education, planning, acclimatization,
modification, and monitoring are all key to keeping heat injuries and
illnesses at bay – effective prevention strategies that coaches
supervising practices often don’t implement, says Michael F.
Bergeron, Ph.D., an ACSM Fellow and Trustee and one of the
nation’s most highly regarded youth sports heat stress
experts.
“Teaching coaches the warning signs of
heat illness would be a huge step toward prevention,” said
Bergeron, who co-wrote the ACSM Roundtable Consensus Statement on
Youth Football Heat Stress and Injury Risk. ”But it’s not enough. Coaches need to
progressively introduce practice duration and intensity, as well as the
uniform and any protective equipment, so that young athletes can safely
adapt. Regular fluid breaks should be mandatory and practice should be
appropriately modified for safety as the heat and humidity increase.
Long gone are the days of refusing players water or using heat as a
strategy to ‘toughen up’ a player. Unless the coach wants a
collapsed athlete - or worse - on the field, it’s just not
acceptable. All athletes need to be closely monitored for signs and
symptoms of developing heat illness, and participation should
immediately stop and medical attention should be promptly sought at the
earliest point of recognition.”
The National Center for Catastrophic Injury
Research, commissioned by the National Federation of State High School
Associations, says that “heat-related deaths continue to be the
cause of a majority of indirect deaths” in high school sports. In
the report, heat stroke and other heat illnesses were experienced in
variety of sports, including cross-country running and wrestling, with
wrestlers working out in heat-holding rubber suits to try to “make
weight” for events. Even marching bands should be concerned and
take precautions – a study at the 2009 ACSM Annual
Meeting showed band participants had
heat illness risk and levels similar to those of athletes.
“I’ve attended numerous junior
tennis tournaments where kids were competing from morning to dusk in
excruciatingly hot summer conditions,” Bergeron said.
“Football might get the most attention for severe heat-related
injuries and illnesses, but the risk in other sports is very
real.”
The ACSM Consensus Statement provides helpful
prevention guidelines that can be applied to all outdoor sports, not
just football:
- Avoid holding practices between 12 and 4 p.m.,
typically the hottest hours of the day (although later hours can also be
as hot or hotter).
- When heat is extreme, hold practices indoors
or use outdoor practices as lighter walk-through sessions.
- Increase the frequency and duration of rest
breaks in the shade during practice, and give plenty of opportunities
for sufficient fluid consumption.
In addition to promoting these proven heat
illness prevention strategies, ACSM is developing new initiatives to
educate not just coaches and schools, but also sport governing bodies
and policymakers on heat illness prevention.
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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.
| heat illness, heat risk, heat stroke, heat exhaustion, fall sports, youth sports, football, football heat illness, football death, sports |
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