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NEWS RELEASE
August 17, 2004
For immediate release
Contact:
Christa Dickey
cdickey@acsm.org
NEW YOUTH FOOTBALL RECOMMENDATIONS EMPHASIZE
PRACTICE AND TRAINING SAFETY IN THE HEAT
Expert Panel: Youth Football Coaches Key to Safety
INDIANAPOLIS – Youth football coaches should adopt practice
modifications and employ a strategy to acclimatize players to perform in
the heat, along with a fluid replacement strategy in anticipation of
young players who begin practice already dehydrated, according
to new recommendations from the American College of Sports Medicine
(ACSM), the world leader in the scientific and medical aspects of sports
and exercise. The guidelines are outcomes from a recent expert panel
convened for an ACSM scientific roundtable on youth football and heat
stress.
Additional recommendations focus on factors that contribute to heat
stress, such as intensity and duration of exercise, body size, health
and fitness level, as well as uniform configurations.
- A player’s core temperature on the field is primarily related
to exercise intensity and duration, clothing/equipment and environmental
conditions. Therefore, practices should be modified to reduce intensity,
duration, and equipment depending on the environmental heat stress. The
team support staff must closely monitor all players, instead of only a
particular focus on less fit, large players with an excessive body mass
index (BMI), for signs and symptoms of developing heat-related injury
during football practice or competition in stressful environments.
- Wearing a full or partial football uniform makes players overheat
sooner, even when the temperature and humidity are not very high. To
reduce the risk of heat injury during the football pre-season, there
should be a gradual addition of the insulating parts of the football
uniform and protective equipment to allow safe transition to full
intensity practice in full gear. Players should wear less padding on
very hot and humid days.
- Young football players often begin practice measurably
dehydrated and sweat a lot on the field, so successive days of football
practice can lead to additional dehydration and reductions in body
weight, which may increase the risk for excessive body temperature and
heat injury. Removing barriers to adequate drinking and providing
optimal conditions for fluid intake will help prevent dehydration. Easy
access to fluids and adequate time for drinking water and other
beverages that are chilled, flavored and contain sodium will help
promote fluid intake during and after training.
- Other measures to help players safely acclimatize during pre-season
and reduce the risk for heat injury during all practices include:
- Schedule a pre-season for at least two weeks, with seven to 10
practice sessions of gradual and increasing exposure to intensity,
duration, and protective equipment. This will allow for proper
acclimatization to the environment and these other factors that increase
heat strain.
- Avoid conducting multiple on-field practice sessions on consecutive
days.
- Regular breaks should be scheduled to limit excessive physical
activity and allow fluid replacement.
- Use the “buddy” system to monitor players (Two players
assigned to “keep an eye on” each other).
- Use shade when available during rest breaks.
- A standardized pre-participation physical examination should be
performed as part of routine healthcare on each football player. A
review of the athlete’s past medical history should include a
history of medication and supplement use, cardiac disease, sickle cell
trait, and previous heat illness.
- Heat cramps are usually prompted by: 1) sodium depletion; 2)
dehydration; and possibly 3) muscle fatigue. Young, fit, football
players who cramp when sweating extensively may need to consume more
salt and fluid, based on their individual losses.
- Special precautions for sickle-trait football players should include
no first-day preseason fitness runs, no timed distance runs, and no
sustained sprints on the field, on hills, or on stairs. Assume that any
cramping is due to red blood cell sickling until proven otherwise.
Screening and precautions for sickle cell trait may readily reduce risk
and save lives.
- Education of coaches, and support staff on how to prevent, identify
and treat heat injuries should be done each year. Adequate number of
staff (coaches or medical support) should be available on site to
effectively monitor the number of participants for potential
problems.
"Kids don’t have to suffer heat injuries or in extreme cases,
die from heatstroke. Heat stress is preventable if parents, coaches and
other adults involved with youth football programs have access to and
utilize the right information,” said Michael F. Bergeron, Ph.D.,
ACSM Fellow and panel co-chair. “These recommendations are meant
to be the beginning of new and expanded programs of research and
education that will help to ensure the health and safety of young
football players everywhere.”
The American College of Sports Medicine is the largest sports
medicine and exercise science organization in the world. More than
20,000 International, National, and Regional members are dedicated to
advancing and integrating scientific research to provide educational and
practical applications of exercise science and sports medicine.
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Youth Football & Heat Stress Roundtable
participants also included Douglas McKeag, M.D., FACSM, Thayne Munce,
Ph.D., Craig Horswill, Ph.D., Anthony Luke, M.D., MPH, Thomas Rowland,
M.D., FACSM, Douglas Casa, Ph.D., FACSM, Priscilla Clarkson Ph.D.,
FACSM, E. Randy Eichner, M.D., William O. Roberts, M.D., FACSM, Randall
Dick, FACSM, and Frederick Mueller, Ph.D., FACSM. The full set of
recommendations and references will be available this fall.
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