Tackling Concussions
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Good news for football moms…and football dads…and football grandparents…and anyone who watches football…and, well, anyone who cares about human life and scientific research. (There must be a category you fit into.)
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, at first in denial about the link between player’s repeated concussions and degenerative cognitive function or Alzheimer’s later in life, has made a laudable 180-degree turnaround. He is now a vocal champion for the safety of his players: “There is no issue of greater importance when it comes to player safety than the effective prevention, diagnosis and treatment of concussions,” Goodell told the 2011 Congress of Neurological Surgeons. “The more we can learn about the brain, the better for all. And we can be the leaders.” Goodell has found religion.
Also impressive was a report on “Good Morning America” by Katie Moisse that more than 500 current and former U.S. athletes have agreed to donate their brains to research – a gift they hope will protect future athletes from a progressive dementia linked to concussions.
Stephanie Smith of CNN reported that in February, former Chicago Bears safety David Duerson, 50, shot himself in the chest, but not before leaving behind a note requesting that his brain be studied for evidence of a disease striking football players. His plaintive note read, “Please, see that my brain is given to the NFL’s brain bank.”