Sunday, November 30, 2014

N.F.L. Teams Now Operate Under a Concussion Management Protocol

Concussions, by the New Book

N.F.L. Teams Now Operate Under a Concussion Management Protocol


         
    
Jim Gossett, as the head-injury spotter for Giants games at MetLife Stadium, watches for players slow to rise after plays. Credit Chang W. Lee/The New York Times 
It happens dozens of times in every N.F.L. game. There is a fierce collision, or perhaps a running back is slammed to the ground. Most of the time, all the players rise to their feet uneventfully.
Other times, as the pileup unravels, a player gets up slowly. His gait may be unsteady.
For decades in the N.F.L., the operative term for the situation was that someone “got dinged.” It was a cute, almost harmless-sounding description of what was often a concussion or a worrying subconcussive blow to the head.
 
But with the N.F.L. agreeing to pay hundreds of millions of dollars to settle a lawsuit brought by about 5,000 former players who said the league hid from them the dangers of repeated hits to the head, a backpedaling league has corrected its lingo and hastily amended its methodology. The N.F.L. now has a concussion management protocol, outlined in an inches-thick document that commands teams to institute a specific, detailed game-day and postconcussion course of action.
 
Once, the treatment of players with head injuries varied from team to team and could be haphazard. Beginning last season, all players suspected of having a head injury — should they lose consciousness from a collision or experience symptoms like a headache, dizziness or disorientation — were required to go through the concussion protocol system. It features a broad cast: a head-injury spotter in the press box, athletic trainers on the bench, doctors and neuro-trauma specialists on the sideline and experts in neuro-cognitive testing in the locker room.
    
The Giants’ team physician, Dr. Russell Warren, in hat, consulted with Justin Pugh (67) at MetLife Stadium on Nov. 16. Team physicians ultimately decide whether players can return to action. Credit Barton Silverman/The New York Times
The system is far from foolproof — players with serious symptoms remain in games. But as the N.F.L. grapples with a sobering threat to the welfare of its work force, not to mention a public-relations nightmare, the new concussion protocol is meant to establish a systemic, itemized policy on how potential brain injuries should be handled.
Based on multiple interviews in the last three months with athletic trainers, players, doctors and head-injury specialists associated with the Giants, the following is a window into how the concussion protocol is designed to work on one team.
 
Keeping an Eye Out
 
“Before the season begins, I make it a point to tell the players that we’re never going to use the word ‘dinged’ again,” said Ronnie Barnes, the Giants’ senior vice president for medical services, who has been with the team since 1980. “It’s a traumatic brain injury. I say to the players, ‘Each time you get a concussion, you’ve injured your brain.’ ”
Perhaps the most novel part of the new protocol is the advent of a head-injury spotter in an upper-level booth at every stadium. The spotter is a seasoned athletic trainer who is selected, trained and paid by the N.F.L. Also in the spotter’s booth are a video monitor and a video operator who can instantly replay a game sequence to scrutinize the mechanism of a potential head injury.
The spotter watches both teams and can communicate directly with the athletic trainers and doctors on the field via telephones that ring on the benches and walkie-talkies that are wired to earpieces. 
 
Jim Gossett, the spotter for Giants games at MetLife Stadium and an athletic trainer at Columbia for more than 30 years, said he looked for players who appear out of sync.  “It might be a player whose balance seems a little off, or he might be shaking his head after a hit,” Gossett said. “Sometimes it’s just someone adjusting his helmet over and over.  “That’s when I call down and say to the people on the sideline: ‘You might want to check so-and-so.’ Or ‘No. 26 doesn’t look right.’ ”
 
While the spotter is primarily looking for big hits that may lead to head or neck injuries, he also helps if a player sustains another kind of injury. As often as 15 to 20 times a game, the spotter tags videotapes of plays in which an injury has occurred or one is suspected. The videos are sent to the sideline, where they are viewed on a computer monitor behind the team’s bench.
 
If alerted by the spotter, the team’s athletic trainers usually approach the players first. Barnes said that in a game on Nov. 23, he approached the team’s wide receivers coach to get a player removed from the field so he could be examined. (Confidentially laws prohibit Barnes from identifying a player unless the player consents to discuss his injury.)
 
The spotter is not the only person watching for something that looks irregular on the field. In a typical game, about 10 Giants doctors and athletic trainers are on the sideline.
Frequently, the symptoms are obvious, as when a player does not get up off the ground for a few seconds.
 
In 2011, Giants long snapper Zak DeOssie was kneed in the head making a tackle on a punt, and he was prone and motionless on the turf for about six seconds before rising to his feet.
When DeOssie reached the sideline, Barnes approached and said, “You’re out of the game.”
 
Answered DeOssie: “On whose authority?” 
 
“Mine,” Barnes responded. 
 
DeOssie began yelling and arguing.  “I felt fine, like nothing had happened,” DeOssie said this month. “I was absolutely convinced I hadn’t been knocked out.”
 
DeOssie did not return to play, and the next day he saw the tape of the play in question.
“I went to Ronnie Barnes and thanked him,” DeOssie said. “Sometimes, as a player, you have to be protected from yourself.”  DeOssie’s case involved a quick and, in Barnes’s view, obvious medical decision. Not everything is as cut and dried. No two concussions are alike.
 
Go or No Go
 
Under the new concussion protocol, a player suspected of having a head injury is interviewed and put through a battery of tests on the bench by a team doctor. Joining the examination is a neurologist or neurosurgeon hired by the league and not directly affiliated with the team. There are two of these league doctors, known as independent neuro-consultants, assigned to every game — one on each sideline.
 
The initial questioning of the player is fairly standard:
What quarter is it? Who scored last? Do you have a headache? Dizziness? Nausea?
The doctors also put the player through exercises meant to test his balance and cognitive skills. Sometimes, the doctors simply have the player wait on the bench so he can be observed.

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