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Head Injuries

Monday, November 26, 2012

New Boston Youth Sports Head Injury Rules Start Today

Teams and coaches must be trained in concussion identification and prevention.

Boston's new youth sports head injury ordinance takes effect today. Youth Sports leagues and teams face a set of new requirements to help reduce the number of concussions and other brain injuries caused by contact sports. Youth sports teams must now have in place training for staff to both identify and manage head injuries, according to MyFoxBoston. The new rules apply to both public and private groups, going a step beyond state law, which requires head injury training for staff of high school and public teams. Community centers that organize games and any group that needs a permit for city-owned property would also have to follow the rules, according to The Boston Globe. Concussions and other brain injuries have been a hot topic of pro …

HeatherB

11:51 am on Monday, November 26, 2012

I applaud Boston's initiative to take state law one step further. Too many of the state laws don't reach down to the youth level, where too many coaches lack proper training. Education is key when it comes to player safety. And not only for coaches but parents as well. Both have access to free information from the CDC on usafootball.com and in the USA Football Heads Up Football app, available for…   more ›

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Sports Groups Must Provide Concussion Training for Athletes, Coaches

The Boston City Council passed an ordinance on Wednesday to create mandatory concussion safety training for permitted organizations on all Boston playing fields, rinks and leagues.

If an independent athletic group wants to use Boston's facilities, they'll have to first provide concussion safety training to all coaches, players, referees, trainers and volunteers. A new ordinance makes the training a prerequisite for a permit to use city-owned facilities. The Boston City Council passed te ordinance at its Wednesday meeting. The ordinance, sponsored by Council President Stephen Murphy, was previously discussed in a March 14 public hearing and two working council committee sessions. The two main points of the ordinance "concerns the procedures organizations should follow in the event of a concussive injury." And second "requires any independent athletic organization seeking a permit to use City-owned facilities to …

ann gallagher

11:42 am on Thursday, August 23, 2012

Great job Steve, big advocate for this, Ann Gallagher   more ›

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