Rugby & Concussions / Head Injuries
-
Biggest single thing that can be done is return to automatic 3-week layoff if you get concussed.
The ex-players who are suffering - and bringing legal cases - seem to be the ones who got concussed once World Rugby removed the 3-week stand down.
-
@mikethesnow said in Concussion:
Biggest single thing that can be done is return to automatic 3-week layoff if you get concussed.
The ex-players who are suffering - and bringing legal cases - seem to be the ones who got concussed once World Rugby removed the 3-week stand down.
Most studies say at least 4 weeks, so That should be the starting point. On average, with the protocol, it was 22 days anyway in 2018-19
-
Rugby certainly not the only sport battling with this.
I just read a post on an AFL forum that almost word for word could have been written here about rugby. A football incident has seen a guy rubbed out for a week, and fans aren't happy (and not just the usual fans of the club said player represents).
Same thing came up, there is no concept of "intent" only outcome.
And oh look, AFL fans are talking about waivers and longer stand downs for concussion. And oh look AFL fans have seen the only way to reduce all risk is to remove all contact. And oh look, AFL fans can see behind the calls for "protect our players" that really mean "protect the game from legal proceedings".
Lawyers are the death of modern society. A curse on their houses.
-
What were the suspensions for blood gate all those years ago?
This seems a pathetically light suspension, probabky should be ramifications for this Dr. outside rugby too.
Edit: checked up the bloodgate scandal, massively more severe
These findings resulted in a 12-month ban for Williams (reduced to four months on appeal),[2] a three-year ban for former director of rugby Dean Richards and a two-year ban for physiotherapist Steph Brennan, as well as a £260,000 fine for the club.
-
Small interview by Ben Alexander with Car Hayman:
My takeaway is that Carl thinks WR has the emphasis wrong on game day rather than management of players.
-
First sensible statement in a while
-
-
-
World Rugby investing an initial €2 million in smart mouthguard technology which will provide in-game alerts to independent pitch-side doctors
-
WXV to debut the technology and approach in October and November
-
Use of mouthguards recommended at all levels of the game across the world
-
Return to play guidelines for community rugby extended to a minimum of 21 days under new guidance
-
World Rugby’s independent concussion working group makes recommendations following presentations from range of world leading experts World Rugby statement on long term neurodegenerative disease also update
World Rugby will advance the Head Injury Assessment (HIA) by introducing in-game alerts from smart mouthguard technology to show if a player has experienced a high level of acceleration which could lead to an injury. The new protocol and technology will be debuted in elite women’s competition WXV from October, and will be integrated into the Head Injury Assessment from January 2024.
World Rugby is investing an initial €2 million to support unions, competitions and clubs with adopting the new smart mouthguard technology supplied by Prevent Biometrics. The smart mouthguards will work in real time to send alerts of high forces to the independent matchday doctor. This will, for the first time, enable players who have experienced a high acceleration event, but not shown symptoms or been seen by broadcast cameras, to be taken off and assessed.
Elite rugby players will be required to wear smart mouthguards to be able to use the in game HIA1 test. The mouthguards will be required in training as well as matches, enabling coaches to better tailor drills, tackle skills and training load for each individual player, and best support their performance and welfare.
The innovation is part of a wider package of changes recommended to World Rugby by its independent Concussion Working Group, and follows the group’s latest meeting this summer in Boston, USA, which heard presentations from world-leading experts including Boston University’s Professor Ann McKee and Dr Chris Nowinski, as well as Prof Grant Iverson of Harvard Medical School. As a result of the presentations that the independent Working Group heard, World Rugby’s Executive Board has also approved:
-
A recommendation that players at all levels of the sport wear a mouthguard, after research in ice hockey found that as well as protecting against dental injuries, mouthguards can reduce the risk of a concussion by 20 per cent.
-
A review of World Rugby’s guidelines on return to play after a concussion in community rugby, extending the time players will sit out to 21 days. Earlier this year, the international federation took action in the community game by confirming a global opt-in trial of a lower tackle height which will see most community players tackling lower in 2023/4 seasons.
-
An update to World Rugby’s position on long term neurodegenerative disease and repeated head impacts, which acknowledges the importance of focusing not just on concussion but forces to the head which may not cause medical symptoms.
In line with World Rugby’s commitment to openness and transparency, recordings and presentations received by the independent concussion working group in Boston have today been published on World Rugby’s website.
-
-
@Bovidae said in Concussion:
Are the refs actually going to enforce the use of mouthguards? So many professional players don't wear them, and nothing is done about it.
Only NZR require wearing mouth guards, it's nothing to do with WR. In this case if you don't wear them, there is no HIA if a head knock is spotted, you're just off with a long stand down. Only an idiot wouldn't wear them if pro
-
-
My takeaway from that article
The "high tackle" crackdown is purely theatre. The real work, as i have said all along, is to be done once guys have concussion. Stay away from the game, get medical attention.
While i have sympathy for these guys, i think it's a trifle unfair to insist a governing body in teh 70s act on medical advice they won't get for another 35 years. This is not like the NFL, where they had the info and buried it.
And, slightly more churlishly, we are talking an incredibly small number of players over a very long period of time.
-
I don't think it's churlish to hope they lose when I read shit like this:
Richard Boardman, the lawyer leading the case, said: “We believe there has been a systematic failure by the rugby governing bodies to protect players not just from concussions but also subconcussions. This is still a real and serious threat to the sport and unless immediate and substantial changes are introduced, current and future generations will end up with the same chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and other neurological impairments.”
Boardman said subconcussions were smaller knocks to the head that could happen more than 60 times in a game for a flanker as they tackle, ruck and maul. These are not fouls but a core part of the sport, and many more occur in training.
If they win on that issue, the game is dead.