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News Release
| For immediate use |
July 1, 2004 -- No. 340 |
Thirteen
football players died during 2003
season, none from heatstroke, study shows
BY
DAVID WILLIAMSON
UNC News Services
CHAPEL
HILL -- For the second year in a row, researchers found no deaths due to
heatstroke among young U.S. football players during the 2003 season, a new
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill study shows.
Between
1995 and 2001, 21 players died from heatstroke, an average of three a year, said
Dr. Frederick Mueller, professor and chair of exercise and sport science in
UNC’s College of Arts and Sciences.
“Again
this year we have good news to report because we have been concerned about the
heatstroke toll,” Mueller said. “Heat-related deaths in sports are almost
entirely preventable. When they happen, it means someone forgot to emphasize or
practice what coaches and trainers have been told for years -- players should
get all the water they want in practice and have frequent cooling-off breaks to
prevent these tragedies.”
Three
players died during 2003 as a direct result of injuries suffered on the field,
including two in high school and one in youth football, he said. Two fatalities
came following severe head injuries and a third after an injury to a neck
artery.
“We
wish, of course, that none of these injury deaths occurred, but the numbers are
low compared to the 1960s and 1970s,” Mueller said.
All
three fatal injuries in 2003 happened during games, he said.
“Seven
others died during 2003 in ways not directly tied to the game but more from
natural causes probably provoked by strenuous exercise,” Mueller said. “Four
happened among high school students, one in college, one in youth football and
one in professional arena football. Of the seven, all four high school, the
youth football and the arena football deaths came from heart-related causes,
while the cause of the college death remains unknown.”
Three
other players died in ways not linked to the sport, including two who died in
their sleep.
Mueller,
chairman of the American Football Coaches’ Committee of Football Injuries,
directs the UNC-based National Center for Catastrophic Sports Injuries. Each
year, the center produces reports on deaths and severe injuries from amateur and
professional sports. Its goal is to make football and other sports safer, he
said.
Reports
are based partly on newspaper stories from around the United States collected
and submitted by about 150 volunteers who monitor sports accidents, along with
information from the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the National
Federation of State High School Associations.
That
36 young men died in 1968 as a direct result of football injuries shows how much
safer the game has become through rule, equipment, medical and coaching changes
that came about in part because of data Mueller and others collected. No such
deaths occurred in 1990.
“We also found 17 cases of permanent disability from catastrophic injuries in football last year, including nine from neck and eight from head injuries,” Mueller said.
Coaches
need to remind players often that the head has no place in football, he said. No
one should make first contact with his -- or her -- head when blocking and
tackling. That’s against the rules, but more importantly, it’s dangerous.
Shorter
practices and non-contact drills during which players don’t wear helmets can
help prevent heatstroke and reduce accidents, Mueller said. Players should be
allowed as much water as they wish, and coaches should schedule regular
cooling-off breaks.
Coaches
and trainers ought to keep a close eye on temperature and humidity, especially
in August and September, he said. Practices should be held early or late in the
day, and if it’s too hot, coaches need to consider canceling them for a day or
so until temperatures and humidity drop.
“Players
must be encouraged to tell coaches or trainers if they don’t feel good,” he
said. “They should never be made to feel weak if they are having trouble.
Although many coaches used to do that and thought it was the right thing, now we
understand that’s a potentially deadly prescription for disaster.”
Between
1960 and 2003, 101 players died from heatstroke, Mueller said. Eight players
died from heatstroke in 1970 alone, the highest one-year total. Before 1955, no
heatstroke deaths were recorded among football players. Few schools and homes
could afford air-conditioning, and it was likely players were better acclimated
to hot weather.
Mueller
and other experts strongly recommend pre-practice physical examinations for boys
-- and the small number of girls -- who want to play football. Such exams
sometimes reveal hidden conditions that make heavy exertion dangerous. Parents
should make sure their children are insured against catastrophic injury and that
medical assistance is available during practices and games.
“Parents
should be involved in their sons and daughters’ athletic teams so that they
can help guarantee that coaches are teaching the proper fundamentals and that
proper precautions are being taken to reduce tragedies,” he said. “Recent
policies adopted by trainers and coaches probably will be helpful since they
require that players with concussions or other head injuries to get immediate
medical attention and not be allowed to return to play until cleared by medical
authorities.
A
Yale University faculty member began the yearly football death and injury survey
in 1931. It moved to Purdue University in 1942 and has been at UNC since 1965.
The American Football Coaches Association, the National Collegiate Athletic
Association and the National Federation of State High School Associations
sponsor the national study.
About
1.5 million junior high school and high school students play football in the
United States each year. Colleges and universities field about 75,000 players.
Co-author
of the new report is Jerry L. Diehl, assistant director of the Federation of
State High School Associations.
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