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Former Mankato State Women's Head Coach

Posted: Fri Jan 01, 2016 10:00 am
by greybeard58
Former Mankato State Women's Head Coach


"Here's what Jordan High School Athletic Director Jeff Vizenor says about concussions suffered by athletes:

"It's not you got your bell rung, you sit out three minutes, you can see two fingers, get back in there."
What Vizenor Says About Concussions

Read more: http://m.swnewsmedia.com/jordan_indepen ... l?mode=jqm

Denna Laing

Posted: Fri Jan 01, 2016 10:03 am
by greybeard58
Denna Laing, 2010
“Nobles 3 Cushing 0 Once again the girls step up without their leading scorer as Denna Laing was again out with a concussion. Marissa Gedman played after being hospitalized with an elbow infection the night before. Great all around effort.”

New England Prep
Read more: http://board.uscho.com/archive/index.ph ... 3-p-5.html


Denna Laing, 2015
‘With only a few moments left in the first of two fifteen-minute periods, Denna Laing of the Boston Pride went down near the end boards in Les Candadiennes end. While the NHL let the clock run down on the period, Laing was tended to by a trainer and emergency medical staff, then stretchered off.”

NWHL’s Denna Laing Injured At Outdoor Women’s Classic
Read more: http://www.todaysslapshot.com/from-the- ... s-classic/


More Laing
“Unfortunately had a great view of it from the side. Went into the board badly head first. Hope for the best.”

Response to CWHL
Read more: https://twitter.com/xxEK98xx/status/682648253893099520


More Laing
“Denna Laing injury update in an hour, when Canadiennes/Pride do press. She was stretchered off after fall in corner. Stepped on a stick.”

“Boston Pride forward Denna Laing was transported from Gillette Stadium to Massachusetts General Hospital after being stretchered off.”

Greg Wyshynski Winter Classic
Read more: https://twitter.com/wyshynski


More Laing
“The Boston Pride and Les Canadiennes were about 12 minutes into a women’s exhibition game at Gillette Stadium when Pride winger and Marblehead native Denna Laing crashed into the endboards behind the north net, bringing a premature and terrible end to the first period of what was supposed to be an exhibition lasting for two 15-minute, running periods.

As Laing was carted away on a stretcher, the second period of the game began as a 12-minute period.”

Serious Injury In Women’s Game At Gillette
Read more: http://blogs.southcoasttoday.com/bruins ... -gillette/


More Laing
Official statement on the condition of Denna Laing from the NWHL PR office:
“During the first half of the 2016 Outdoor Women’s Classic presented by Scotiabank, Boston Pride forward Denna Laing was injured after hitting the boards.

She was transported from Gillette Stadium to Massachusetts General Hospital. We will issue on her condition as it is made available.”

NWHL Update
Read more: https://twitter.com/NWHL_/status/682659325689630721

Posted: Sat Jan 02, 2016 7:52 am
by greybeard58
Big Lady Brains
“Concussions have been playing a big role in the cultural conversation this year, not least of all because of the new movie Concussion. But despite the heavy coverage of high school football helmets and pro-athlete brain damage, there's one group of heads not getting any attention: women's.

According to Jamshid Ghajar, M.D., neurosurgeon and director of the Stanford Concussion and Brain Performance Center, the scientific community has been slacking on studying C in women, despite the fact that more women than men are taking serious hits to the head. "All the studies are in helmeted males," he says. "We're not studying women playing lacrosse or soccer."

What the studies do show, is that not only do more women tend to suffer from C, they tend do fare worse when it comes to long-term effects. In fact, girls playing high school sports experience concussions at twice the rate of their male counterparts, according to a study published in the American Journal of Sports Medicine (read more at http://ajs.sagepub.com/content/early/20 ... 6510392326).

And it only gets worse for women from there, according to a study published in Radiology (read more at: https://www2.rsna.org/timssnet/media/pr ... cfm?ID=809) earlier this year. Concussions cause decreased activation in working memory circuits, so to take a look at long-term effects, researchers analyzed post-concussion MRI scans of men and women immediately after the injury as well as scans taken six weeks after. Six weeks after the injury, scans showed that brain activation patterns returned to normal in most men, while women continued to show decreased activity and memory impairment.

Adding to the concussion confusion is the fact that there actually isn't a widely agreed upon criterion for what constitutes a concussion. "We all know what a concussion is but there's no actual accepted diagnosis for it," says Ghajar.

According to Ghajar, a concussion involves a balance and attention impairment that follows a force to the head. "Attention is the main problem. If you can't focus or you can't do your work, you shouldn't participate in contact sports. It affects your life," he says.

So what is it about the nature of C that leaves the ladies more vulnerable? According to Ghajar, we can thank our big lady brains. Seriously.
"Women are more prone to having attention issues after a force to the head because they have big brains and small necks, as I like to put it," says Ghajar. "What happens is the force of the hit causes the head to move above the neck, which produces a whiplash effect. That's what does the damage."
We tend to think of concussions occurring when an area of our skulls get hit so hard it damages the brain underneath. But that's not what's actually going on. It's actually a product of our brain getting tossed against the front of our skull. The more flexible the neck, the greater the whiplash effect—perhaps the only bad thing about all those Bikram classes you've been taking. Typically when this whiplash happens, your brain hits the front of your skull, causing damage to the frontal lobe, which controls memory and decision-making. Hence the fogginess associated with the injury.
There's also evidence that our brain biology plays into the increased risk. Estrogen can cause hyperexcitability in your head—a fancy way of saying greater neural sensitivity. So when that whiplash does happen, the female brain may be more sensitive to damage.

But biological differences aren't the only factors at play, according to Sheena Aurora, M.D., Clinical Associate Professor, Neurology & Neurological Sciences at Stanford. "The whole aspect of gender biases plays into this," she says. "Women might not play [contact sports] as much but might try to play harder or play through it to compensate. We often don't prioritize our own health."

And when it comes to C, prioritizing your health is essential. "Most physicians will say if you have a brain injury you should rest your brain and rest your body," says Ghajar. "Essentially go into a dark room and wait for all of your symptoms to go away before you can do anything."

That sounds depressing. And it is, which is why Ghajar, who often sees prolonged symptoms of depression and anxiety in patients following concussions, doesn't recommend it. (Find out more about Your Brain On: Depression http://www.shape.com/lifestyle/mind-and ... depression)

Instead, activity—albeit the right kind—is the path to recovery. "Even if they have a concussion, we encourage people to do cardio exercise as part of the recovery," says Ghajar. "The first thing to do is get active." He recommends 20 minutes of cardio every other day to get blood flowing to the brain.
Secondly, it's important to make sure you pay extra attention to your sleep pattern, since problems with chronic fatigue and inability to get a full night of zzz's is often a sign of long-term symptoms.

"If you haven't recovered in a week, you should go see your doctor," says Ghajar, who says the main things docs should be looking for are issues with attention and balance.

The bottom line? Whether you're an athlete or simply fitness-focused, it's important to know your risks and use your big lady brain to take care of your head health.”

Are Women At An Increased Risk For Concussions?
Read more: http://www.shape.com/lifestyle/mind-and ... oncussions http://www.shape.com/lifestyle/mind-and ... oncussions

Misinformation: Hockey

Posted: Sat Jan 02, 2016 7:54 am
by greybeard58
“mildly” concussed is like being “mildly” pregnant
“I must admit I am being a bit “Pollyannaish” about using the correct terms and classifications of concussions. But seriously it needs to stop, for the sake of the kids and general public. All these terms do is muddy the water about concussions.

Case 1: Chris Pronger at http://www.csnphilly.com/hockey-philade ... feedID=695 – “Concussion-Like Symptoms”;

Pronger has what general manager Paul Holmgren called “concussion-like” symptoms and is out indefinitely.

Braydon Coburn, when asked whether it had been easier to wrap his head around just three more weeks without the captain as opposed to the “indefinite” absence announced on Friday, said: “I don’t know. I don’t even know what day it is.”


Case 2 (my biggest pet peeve): Daniel Paille at http://www.boston.com/sports/hockey/bru ... oncussion/ – “Mild Concussion”;

Paille did not accompany the team to Columbus, Ohio, yesterday, remaining in Boston with a mild concussion, according to coach Claude Julien. Paille suffered the injury during the Bruins’ 2-0 loss to the Florida Panthers Thursday. Krystofer Barch was assessed a charging penalty on the play, but after seeing replays, Julien said he thought the check was clean.


Perhaps teams and players forget quickly, as Sidney Crosby was sidelined for 10, TEN, months with a “mild concussion”. Stop minimizing the injury and treat it correctly at http://theconcussionblog.com/2011/09/15 ... ussions-2/ ;

Hogwash! There is NOTHING mild about a concussion, period. However media, teams, players and even medical staffs continue to use this nomenclature with this injury. It is simply counterproductive to label this injury with a “mild” tag, and hampers the effort of everyone trying to increase awareness.

During my public speaking I often relate being “mildly” concussed to being “mildly” pregnant… You are either concussed or not, just like you are pregnant or not.”



Misinformation: Hockey
Read more: http://theconcussionblog.com/2011/12/10 ... on-hockey/

A Legend Weighs In

Posted: Sat Jan 02, 2016 7:57 am
by greybeard58
Often cited as a role model for Manon Rheume and other women’s hockey players, Ken Dryden is a former NHL goaltender, lawyer, author and member of Parliament. He wrote this nearly 5 years ago.

“The brain weighs about three pounds. It floats inside a boney skull, surrounded by spinal fluid, not quite in contact with the skull. Except when the head is jarred.

Then, the brain moves, ricocheting back and forth, colliding with the sides of the skull, like a superball in a squash court. With hard-enough contact, the brain bleeds. And the parts inside it - the neurons and pathways that we use to think, learn and remember - get damaged.

Why would we ever have thought otherwise?

Why would we ever have believed that when the dizziness goes away, everything goes back as it had been before? All the little hits, scores of them in every game, so inconsequential that we don't even know they've occurred - how could we not have known? How could we be so stupid?

I feel the same when I remember that the effects of smoking or of drunk driving were ignored for so long. I feel it when I think of women in the past having no right to vote and few rights of any kind, and when I think about slavery: How could people 50, 100 or 200 years ago not have known? How could they be so stupid?

I wonder what will make people say that about us 50 years from now. What are the big things we might be getting really wrong? Chemicals in our foods? Genetic modifications gone wrong? Climate change?

In sports, I think, the haunting question will be about head injuries. It wasn't until 1943 in the National Football League that helmets became mandatory; in the National Hockey League, not until 36 years after that, in 1979. The first goalie mask wasn't worn in the NHL until 1959.

And in a whole childhood and adolescence of playing goalie, I didn't wear a mask until 1965, when I had to wear one on my college team. How could I have been so stupid?

Smash, crash, bang, maim
A football wide receiver, 220 pounds, cuts across the middle of the field at 35 kilometres an hour; a linebacker, 240 pounds, cuts the other way at 20 km/hour. The wide receiver focuses on the ball; the linebacker focuses on the wide receiver, knowing that a good hit now won't just break up the pass but will break down the focus and will of that wide receiver for each succeeding pass in the game.

Two hockey players, almost as big as the football players, but going even faster, colliding with each other and with the boards, glass and ice exaggerating the force of every hit.

Boxers, snapping jabs and hooks at each other's head, round after round. (But no hitting below the belt; that's not fair.) Ultimate Fighting: Fist, foot, elbow, knee, bone against bone - get your opponent down, get him defenceless and pound away.

In addition, there are the countless mini-collisions that never make the "Highlights of the Night." They make players feel a little dizzy, but then seconds later, almost every time, they feel fine. So they must be fine.

Years later, they may not be thinking so clearly or remembering so well, at a slightly younger age than other people, perhaps. But in the randomness of everything else in life, who's to know why? It could be genes or bad luck. Hockey player Reggie Fleming, known as "Cement Head"; football players Mike Webster, Owen Thomas or Mike McCoy; wrestler Chris Benoit …

A few weeks ago, I read about the suicide of Dave Duerson, a former all-pro safety with the Chicago Bears. He was 50. In recent years, Mr. Duerson had worked with the NFL players' union, dealing with retired players and their physical ailments, head injuries among them, and reading their doctors' reports. He had begun to have trouble himself remembering names and putting words together. Then, one day he shot himself, not in the head but the chest, so as to preserve his brain intact for future examination, bequeathing it to the NFL's brain bank.

On the same day, in the same newspapers, there was another story about Ollie Matson, an all-pro running back in the 1950s and 1960s for several NFL teams. He was 80 when he died, and for the last several years of his life he had been suffering from dementia; over the last four years, he hadn't spoken. Mr. Matson's death and dementia, it seemed, had to do with the consequences of old age. No connection was made to football or Dave Duerson.

A few days earlier, there had been a story about the death of Bobby Kuntz. He had been one of my favourite players as a kid. During the late 1950s and 1960s, he played for the Toronto Argonauts and Hamilton Tiger-Cats, playing "both ways" as players of the time did - a running back on offence and a linebacker on defence.

He was small for the positions he played, and especially small for the way he played them. He'd put his head down and throw himself into the line or into the bodies of ball carriers, the sound of his collisions sharper and more resounding than any others - the kind that, as a fan, made you go "oooh" and laugh. He was fearless. In playground games, I used to pretend I was Bobby Kuntz, head down, fearless in my own mind.

Mr. Kuntz died at 79, having suffered from dementia the last 11 years of his life. The Kuntz family agreed to have his brain donated to a study of athletes and head injuries, the article said.

The myth of the 'nature of the game'
What is our answer to those voices 50 years into the future? We can only say that we didn't want to know. We thought - we hoped - there wasn't a problem, because if there were, something would need to be done, and we didn't want to do it.

To do something would change the nature of the game. It may be all right, or inevitable, for everything in the world around the game to change; but the game itself is "pure" and must remain that way.

Hockey began in Montreal in 1875 because some rugby players wanted a game for the wintertime, and they wanted to hit each other. But the rugby players couldn't skate very fast, their bodies were smaller than ours are today, and they were playing on a smaller ice surface where they had little room to pick up momentum. With no substitutions allowed, the game moved at coasting speed.

Bigger ice surfaces changed the nature of the game; so did the forward pass; so did boards and glass; so did substitutions, shorter shifts and bigger bodies. Helmeted players in today's game are far more vulnerable to serious head injury than helmet-less players were in generations ago.

We choose to ignore the fact that the "nature" of any game is always changing. Today's hockey - in terms of speed, skill, style of play and force of impact - is almost unrecognizable from hockey 50 years ago, let alone 100. Likewise, helmets, facemasks, 300-plus-pound players and off-field, year-round training have transformed football.

These and other sports changed because someone thought of new ways to do things, others followed and nobody stopped them. In many cases, sports have had to change for reasons of safety or economics. For the sake of the players and fans and the game itself, these sports will and do need to change again.

A few days ago, I read the story of Bob Probert. He was a "goon" whose ability to fight got him into the NHL, and gave him the extra years and playing time he needed to learn how to play an all-around game. It has been calculated that Mr. Probert was in 240 NHL fights - few of which he lost - and countless more in his minor hockey years. Before he died last year, his wife reported, he had been forgetting things and frequently losing his temper. In a post-mortem examination, Boston University's School of Medicine recently reported, Mr. Probert was found to have chronic-traumatic-encephalopathy cells in his brain. He was 45.

The voices of the future will not be kind to us about how we understood and dealt with head injuries in sports. They will ask: How is it possible we didn't know, or chose not to know?

For players or former players, owners, managers, coaches, doctors and team doctors, league executives, lawyers, agents, the media, players' wives, partners and families, it's no longer possible not to know and not to be afraid, unless we willfully close our eyes.

Max Pacioretty was only the latest; he will not be the last. Arguments and explanations don't matter any more. The NHL has to risk the big steps that are needed: If some of them prove wrong, they'll still be far less wrong than what we have now.

It is time to stop being stupid.


A Legend Weighs In
Ken Dryden On Hockey Violence: How Could We Be So Stupid?
Read more: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/h ... /?page=all

The Damage Done By Concussions

Posted: Sat Jan 02, 2016 8:01 am
by greybeard58
Women’s Hockey Doesn’t Have A Sid The Kid, Yet.
“Until a month ago, there was nothing typical about Sidney Crosby. At 23, the Pittsburgh Penguins captain had already won the Stanley Cup, an Olympic gold medal, and the praise of Wayne Gretzky, who raved in December: “He’s the real deal. He’s the best player in the game.” Crosby had been on a 25-game scoring streak, amassing goals at a faster rate than ever before in his career—and the longest run since Mats Sundin’s 30-game tear almost 20 years ago.

Crosby’s streak came to a crashing end, however, when he was diagnosed with a concussion in early January—having endured two massive blows only a few days apart. The first time, Crosby took the cold, hard shoulder of Washington Capitals winger David Steckel to the side of his head. The velocity of the hit snapped his neck back, and spun him in the air for a full rotation. His 200-lb. body thudded onto the ice, and as Crosby hunched over, his mouthguard slipped out. Eventually, he skated to the bench, bent over. Despite a sore neck, Crosby shrugged off the pain, and played in the next game.
That’s when a crushing check by Victor Hedman of the Tampa Bay Lightning slammed Crosby’s head against the boards. The collision happened so fast that startled fans on the other side of the Plexiglas jerked back in their seats as if Crosby might come hurtling right into their laps. Instead, he melted onto the ice and doubled over. When his face was finally visible, the grimace said it all. ‘Sid the Kid’ was done. Suddenly and spectacularly, Sidney Crosby went from being the golden boy of hockey to just one more pro athlete incapacitated with a concussion.

...The incidence of concussion is even higher among children and adolescents (up to 200 per 100,000). In youth, the injury is harder to detect, and the symptoms tend to be more severe and take longer to subside. The impact on development could be more serious too, says Dr. Jeffrey Kutcher, a neurologist and professor at the University of Michigan. “Until about 19 or 20 you’re still gaining neural connections, so any effect before that has the potential for changing the final course of that person’s cognitive ability.”

But many parents don’t know their children have been brain injured, suspects Philip Schatz, a neuropsychologist at Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia who studies concussion in youth: “Kids have sustained concussions and either they’re not aware of it or they haven’t told anybody about it.” Children can’t articulate their symptoms, or they are confused with other conditions that cause vomiting, fatigue, and irritability, while teens and their parents might attribute them to adolescent drama.

In this way, Crosby’s concussion made him typical, too: he became just another kid who got hit once, and played it off until he got hit again—and was forced to sit out his favourite game. What’s happened to him has turned the eternal debate about changing pro sports rules and building better equipment into a gut-wrenching discussion about regular boys and girls who’ve suffered concussions—and whether they won’t reach their full potential because of it.

“It’s horrible that Sidney had to sustain an injury like he has. But this is a common problem that’s not being talked about enough,” says Dr. Paul Echlin, a sports physician in London, Ont., who published a shocking study last fall indicating the rate of concussion among junior hockey players to be at least seven times higher than previously thought. “You can’t turn your head [on the issue] when you know this injury is occurring at an epidemic proportion” in young people, he says. “This is the most precious resource we have. Their future is at stake.”

...When concussions are suspected, they’re often downplayed. Schatz points to research that concussed high school players don’t always tell someone about their injury. Why not? “The players want to play. They fear being taken out of the game, or losing their position on the team,” explains Echlin, while coaches and parents put too much emphasis on winning, and pushing through the pain. Adding to the problem is the cutesy language surrounding concussions: when players shake their dizzy heads, they’re ‘getting the cobwebs out.’ When they can barely get stand up, they’ve got ‘Bambi legs.’

Even measures put in place to take concussions seriously, such as reporting all injuries to the league, are ignored. A 2006 study by researchers at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C., compared concussion rates in youth hockey as reported by coaches and players versus official reports to the British Columbia Amateur Hockey Association. It revealed a massive disconnect: official reports indicated fewer than one concussion per 1,000 game hours, while coaches noted nearly eight, and players declared up to 24.

Last fall, Echlin discovered the true prevalence of concussions among young people after following two junior hockey teams for a season (players ranged in age from 16 to 21). In 52 games, there were 21 concussions. Only three of those concussions were self-admitted by players, and more than one in four of those players sustained another or recurrent concussions that season. “This is with a trained specialist physician on site,’ he says, adding that without that, “I don’t know how many would’ve been picked up or treated.’

This is compounded by the fact that historically many sports team doctors (minor or major league) have been specialists in orthopaedics, with a particular focus on bones and ligaments, not the head. “But they were the ones having to deal with all the brain injuries, which didn’t really make a lot of sense,’ says Johnston. “Obviously they were doing the best they can, but couldn’t bring a deep understanding to that venue.’

The question that looms large is, what does one concussion or more mean in the long run? “Almost all the science until recently has been in adults and young adults,’ says Johnston, and it’s unclear to what extent the current rest-and-wait approach to treating adult populations should be extrapolated to kids, or whether they need more extensive care. The lack of understanding makes doctors even more concerned. “We are very conservative with children,’ she explains. “They suffer more with this injury, their recovery patterns are different, and they obviously have developmental milestones that they’re going through that may suffer.”

New research is illuminating the situation. One study by Schatz analyzed data for more than 2,500 healthy high school athletes across three states and found that those who had a history of two or more concussions were more likely to report concussion-related symptoms—such as headaches, balance problems, sensitivity to light and noise, trouble concentrating and sleeping, irritability, nervousness—than their peers who had one concussion or none. His previous work has shown that students who have had two or more concussions scored lower on measures of attention and concentration, and did worse in school.”

The Damage Done By Concussions
Sidney Crosby Is A Case Study In What We Know, And What We Don’t Know
http://www.macleans.ca/society/the-damage-done/

Harvard Skater

Posted: Sun Jan 03, 2016 9:56 am
by greybeard58
from another hockey blog

Harvard Skater
"I've been reading through your comments and I have to say that I agree with you. Unless the league gets more serious about eliminating illegal hits, we'll see more of this continue.

For example, this was a video I recorded with my phone from a Harvard game this season.

https://gfycat.com/MerrySpitefulArrowworm

The Harvard player was jarred so hard that she's been out for 2 months now and is still unable to play hockey due to a concussion. Not only was no penalty called on the play, but the actual hit wasn't even reviewed by the NCAA. It's disappointing that the NCAA claims to be doing due diligence in regards to concussions, yet can completely ignore plays like this.

I certainly hope for the future and safety of upcoming players, both the NCAA and the refs at hand will take hits like this one more seriously."

Harvard Crimson 2015-16
Read more: http://board.uscho.com/showthread.php?1 ... 2016/page6

Paige Decker’s Concussion Blog 15

Posted: Mon Jan 04, 2016 9:49 am
by greybeard58
15. The Right Way to Evaluate a Concussion — The Invisible Injury
http://www.theinvisibleinjury.net/blog/2016/1/3/15

Two Injured D3 Players

Posted: Tue Jan 05, 2016 10:45 pm
by greybeard58
Two Injured D3 Players
"It is definitely getting worse in women's hockey. Saw two separate D3 games last year where a frustrated player turned and punched an opposing player blindside in the head either on the side or from behind - totally cold-cocked them (Lauren Fitzgerald from Trinity and Michele Meggiolaro from Manhattanville - both have now graduated). In the first case, Fitzgerald got a 2 minute minor and the injured player missed two weeks with a concussion. In the second case, Meggiolaro got a 2 minute minor and the injured player missed 2 months with a concussion and now has retired due to accumulated concussions. I do not understand how a referee can watch a player cold-cock another player in the head, leaving them prone on the ice with trainers rushing to attend to them, 10 minute stoppages to aid the injured player, and the player going straight to the locker room, and then call a 2 minute minor. It should be a minimum 5 minute major with a game misconduct and subsequent suspension by the league. It simply should not be tolerated.

The sad part is that the NWHL seems to be heading in the same direction now. "The @CTWhale_NWHL once again ticked the 'W' column after a heated game against @NYRiveters http://nwhl.co/quick-recap-ctw-nyr-6-1/ …" Apparently women fighting will bring in fans just like men's hockey in the 70's. Sad...."

Read more: http://board.uscho.com/showthread.php?1 ... 2016/page6

Denna Laing update

Posted: Thu Jan 07, 2016 9:20 am
by greybeard58

Goalie story

Posted: Thu Jan 07, 2016 9:23 am
by greybeard58
Jessica Thompson
"As a goaltender on a varsity hockey team I am unfortunately all too familiar with concussions. Take a weird turn and go head first into the boards. Fall in centre ice and the head nails the ice. Stand in the net ready for a shot and the puck flies rapidly at your face. All of these scenarios can lead to a concussion. While the damage isn’t always visible, concussions can lead to lifelong complications and must be dealt with right away.

I suffered two concussions in less than a year, the effects of which were extremely serious. Both were mostly my fault as my helmet had expired in 2006 and I decided to play with my odds rather than spending the money to buy a new helmet. As fate would have it, I took three slap shots to the face in two days, the last from the blue line, which secured my injury. The moment the puck hit me in the mask I went down – the white ice began to flicker with black spots and I couldn’t focus my vision. It felt as though I was on a merry-go-round, the world spinning around me even though I was sitting still. I had to go see the doctor immediately, who told me that I counted as a 40 on her concussion scale (the lower the number, the less severe the concussion.) I was out of hockey for five months and I missed school for two full weeks. In university, missing just a day of school can be detrimental; missing two weeks in third year was like asking to be put on academic probation. Luckily my school, Carleton University, had many programs that helped students who were unable to attend classes as a result of injury.

During the weeks I was recovering I had to have my notes taken for me in class. When I began to feel a bit better I hand wrote my notes instead of using the computer since the screen would give me severe migraines. I was given more time to write my exams than other students and wrote them in a special office, with the option to take supervised breaks if needed. Despite all of this support, getting a concussion was still the worst thing I have ever experienced. Having to lay in bed all day in the dark; not being able to listen to music, watch movies or do any sort of physical activity; and not being able to do my homework were just some of the things I had to deal with while I was injured."
Mind Your Head
Read more: http://www.bcchf.ca/blog/mind-your-head/

sad story former Jr Player

Posted: Thu Jan 07, 2016 11:31 am
by greybeard58

Concussion rates in youth hockey

Posted: Fri Jan 08, 2016 11:33 am
by greybeard58
"Concussion rates in youth hockey may be similar to the injury risk with other high-contact sports, though many of the collisions in hockey appear to result from illegal moves on the ice, a U.S. study suggests.

Overall, the players experienced about 1.6 concussions for every 1,000 minutes of participation time, the study found. That amounts to around one injury for roughly every 10 hours of practice and competition."
Youth hockey concussions similar to other contact sports
Read more: http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSKBN0UM1VS20160108

injuries in young players

Posted: Fri Jan 08, 2016 11:36 am
by greybeard58
Ice hockey, rugby and golf accounted for the highest proportions of total internal organ injuries – with more than 9 percent of all internal injuries coming from hockey and more than 8 percent each from rugby and golf.

Ice hockey, rugby and lacrosse contributed the highest proportion of concussions, with about 6 percent to 9.5 percent each, according to the results in Injury Prevention.

More than a third of injuries among kids ages five to 10 years were head or neck injuries, a higher proportion than for older kids.

“We’re seeing more severe injuries in the youngest age group,” Bell said. “One thing that might explain that is sports becoming more competitive and less emphasis on injury prevention.

“We know that more kids are vying for scholarships or starting younger, that might be something future researchers can look at,” she said.
Kids’ sports injuries in the emergency department on the rise
Read more: http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSKBN0UM1SK20160108

Western University Women's Hockey Player

Posted: Fri Jan 08, 2016 11:38 am
by greybeard58
Western University Women's Hockey Player

"Concussions can manifest themselves very differently in different athletes, so you cannot assume that since they are sitting quietly and look normal that they are fine. I actually remember one of our players at Western University when I was the trainer take a body check on the ice. I didn’t think anything of it, she got up, stayed with the play, no problem.

When she was on the bench between shifts I noticed she was acting a little odd. So I went over to ask her how she was doing and if I had not known better, I would have sworn she was drunk. She was over the top with her exuberance and confusion. It was shocking how the hit seemed insignificant but obviously had a huge impact on her brain."
Concussions in Hockey
Read more: http://ingoalmag.com/training/revolutio ... y-goalies/

Denna Laing update statement and link

Posted: Fri Jan 08, 2016 5:49 pm
by greybeard58
Statement from Jerilyn and Dennis Laing
“Denna was thrilled to be taking part in the inaugural season of the National Women’s Hockey League and was absolutely delighted to be one of the pioneers in a breakthrough moment for her sport – the Outdoor Women’s Classic. Tragically, Denna suffered a severe spinal cord injury playing the sport she loves. As of today, Denna has limited movement of her arms and no feeling in her legs. Our prayer going forward is that Denna can be moved from the Intensive Care Unit to a Rehabilitation Center and continue to fight everyday with her trademark grit and resolve. With respect to her long term prognosis, right now there are more questions than answers. We have received an incredible outpouring of love and support from countless friends and family members while we try to navigate this overwhelming situation. We are eternally grateful to everyone who continues to offer support as we take on this challenge together.”


http://nwhl.co/wp-content/uploads/2016/ ... 8_16_2.pdf

Denna Laing update from nhl site

Posted: Fri Jan 08, 2016 5:52 pm
by greybeard58
Family of NWHL player Laing issues statement

The National Women's Hockey League issued the following statement on Friday updating the condition of Boston Pride forward Denna Laing, who was injured while playing in the inaugural Outdoor Women's Classic on Dec. 31:

"Boston Pride forward Denna Laing suffered a significant spinal injury during last Friday’s Outdoor Women’s Classic at Gillette Stadium. Doctors continue to evaluate her status."

The NWHL also released the following statements on behalf of Denna Laing's family, NWHL Commissioner Dani Rylan, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman, the Boston Bruins, the Montreal Canadiens and the New England Patriots:

Jerilyn and Dennis Laing: "Denna was thrilled to be taking part in the inaugural season of the National Women's Hockey League and was absolutely delighted to be one of the pioneers in a breakthrough moment for her sport -- the Outdoor Women's Classic. Tragically, Denna suffered a severe spinal cord injury playing the sport she loves. As of today, Denna has limited movement of her arms and no feeling in her legs. Our prayer going forward is that Denna can be moved from the Intensive Care Unit to a Rehabilitation Center and continue to fight every day with her trademark grit and resolve. With respect to her long-term prognosis, right now there are more questions than answers. We have received an incredible outpouring of love and support from countless friends and family members while we try to navigate this overwhelming situation. We are eternally grateful to everyone who continues to offer support as we take on this challenge together."

Dani Rylan, NWHL Commissioner: "The players, teams, coaches, management and staff of the National Women's Hockey League are united in their support of Denna Laing and her family. To reflect our admiration for her as a player and our appreciation for her contribution to the NWHL's first season, we are working with the Laings, our business partners and others to respond compassionately and appropriately to her injury. We will announce further details as soon as plans are formalized. Denna's drive to excel has inspired teammates and coaches alike; in honor of that attribute, I have directed our teams to wear a helmet sticker bearing her uniform number, 24."

Gary Bettman, NHL Commissioner: "Everyone at the National Hockey League, including the Boston Bruins and Montreal Canadiens, joins Denna Laing's coaches, teammates, friends and fans in wishing Denna the very best as she confronts the challenges ahead. While we are certain Denna will be served well by the tenaciousness that is her trademark, we also will work with the Laing family to rally the support of the hockey family during Denna's rehabilitation.

"We have withheld comment to this point out of respect for the wishes of the Laing family and will continue to honor those wishes going forward."

Cam Neely, Boston Bruins: "On behalf of the Jacobs family I would like to extend the full support of the Boston Bruins to Denna and the Laing family. The New England hockey community is an incredibly strong group, and we know the assistance that will be provided to Denna and her family will be unwavering both in the immediate future and throughout the various stages of treatment."

Geoff Molson, Montreal Canadiens: "The entire Canadiens family, from ownership to management, staff and players, wishes to extend their very best to Denna through this hardship and lends its support to her and her family following this unfortunate injury. Our thoughts are with Denna, her family, friends and teammates."

The Kraft family, New England Patriots: "The Kraft family and entire Gillette Stadium community were deeply saddened to learn of the extent of Denna Laing’s injuries. Our prayers remain with Denna and her family in the hope that she will soon be able to transition to a rehabilitation center that will enable her to continue to improve. We will keep Denna and her family in our prayers throughout her rehabilitation process."

Denna's family and friends have set up a website, www.dennalaing.org, for anyone interested in following her progress and lending support.

http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=796736&cmpid=nhl-twt

Denna Laing update NY Times link

Posted: Fri Jan 08, 2016 8:50 pm
by greybeard58
Denna Laing, Who Fell During Outdoor Women’s Classic, Has No I Feeling in Her Legs

Denna Laing was injured Dec. 31 during the Outdoor Women’s Classic. She has limited movement of her arms, her family said.
MADDIE MEYER / GETTY IMAGES
By SETH BERKMAN
JANUARY 8, 2016

Boston Pride forward Denna Laing sustained a severe spinal cord injury after falling near the boards during the Outdoor Women’s Classic on Dec. 31 at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass.

On Friday evening, Laing’s family said in a statement that she has limited movement of her arms and no feeling in her legs. They said they hoped she would be moved out of an intensive-care unit to a rehabilitation center.

Laing’s injury occurred with less than two minutes left in the first period of the game. Pride Coach Bobby Jay said after the contest that Laing, 24, stepped on a stick and lost her footing, although he later conceded that he did not have a good angle to see the play unfold. Replays were not available, and the game was not broadcast live on television or streamed online.

The game’s inclusion in the N.H.L.’s Winter Classic festivities was supposed to be a milestone for professional women’s hockey, but it was played amid scrutiny in its formation. The exhibition included two 15-minute periods played on a running clock.

Before the women’s game, during a practice on the makeshift rink at Gillette Stadium, home to the New England Patriots, N.H.L. players complained about an ice surface that they called slushy and dangerous. Temperatures during the women’s game reached the mid-40s, and Laing’s injury occurred on an end of the ice where the sun was shining for much of the afternoon.

Jay and players made available to the news media after the game did not say the ice was a problem, but earlier this week, other Pride players and staff members said there were deep cuts on the ice that caused the puck to constantly bounce and players to trip in certain spots.

One Pride player, who said she did not believe Laing fell on a stick, described the playing conditions as “awful.”

The game, which featured the Pride of the National Women’s Hockey League and Les Canadiennes of the Canadian Women’s Hockey League, was not announced until Dec. 28, as the parties involved worked on completing details that included insurance coverage for players.

A N.W.H.L. representative said that the league had an insurance policy in place “specifically for incidents like this,” referring to Laing’s injury. The C.W.H.L. said that their players have complete medical and injury insurance for all players in Canada and the United States.

One participant in the Outdoor Women’s Classic said the N.H.L. had players sign a general liability waiver.

Laing’s family had requested privacy about her condition, and there had been no public update on her health since the game other than that she had been taken to Massachusetts General Hospital after being taken off the ice on a stretcher.

Some Pride players were told after the game that she was undergoing surgery. Several college women’s teams displayed their support for Laing on social media by posting photographs of players forming the number 14 at center ice, the number Laing wore at Princeton.

Sydney Daniels, a junior on Harvard’s women’s team and a teammate of Laing’s sisters, Brianna and Lexie, started a Go Fund Me account for Denna that raised more than $40,000 online, including contributions from her Pride teammates. The web page was eventually closed, reportedly at the request of the Laing family.

“We are working with the Laings, our business partners and others to respond compassionately and appropriately to her injury,” N.W.H.L. Commissioner Dani Rylan said in a statement on Friday. Laing’s family and friends have established a website for donations.

N.H.L. Commissioner Gary Bettman said in a statement that the league “will work with the Laing family to rally the support of the hockey family during Denna’s rehabilitation.”

Laing previously played for the C.W.H.L.’s Boston Blades and worked as a victim witness advocate for the district attorney’s office in Essex County, Mass.

In an interview with The New York Times last February, Laing said she planned to attend law school this fall. She was a practice squad player for the Pride, called up to replace members of the United States national team who were absent for training camp. The maximum salary in the N.W.H.L. this season is $25,000.

In the days leading up to the Outdoor Women’s Classic, Laing posted a message on Twitter about her excitement and reposted a photo from her mother showing the more than 20 tickets she had obtained for the game.

“It’s just a scary thing and to come to a realization about it, the last week I tried not to talk about it because it doesn’t seem real to me,” Pride forward Rachel Llanes said by phone on Friday night. “My team, we’re all struck by it and we’re all sad by it.”

http://mobile.nytimes.com/2016/01/09/sp ... -legs.html

Two Star Tribune Readers

Posted: Sat Jan 09, 2016 4:29 am
by greybeard58
Two Star Tribune Readers
“While we can't always know what sets the stage for the one seemingly small concussion or bonk on the bean to cause what seems more bothersome than other small hits had caused others, there is absolutely no doubt that a single hit can have devastating consequences.

And while there is no way of knowing (yet) if CTE is involved, and that the fact that it happens to one is not predictive that it would happen to all, may I give an example of an event in which there is absolutely no question that a hit to the head was the cause of a change in course of a good person.

A young mother of two was taking a quick run across her neighborhood and didn't snap on her seat belt although as the good mother she was, the kids were properly restrained. This despite her being in law enforcement and knowing much better.

A 25 mph Tbone at an intersection just blocks from her home cause a side head injury that didn't cause her to lose consciousness, but made her foggy.

That fogginess never cleared over weeks. She was on limited duty at work due to memory problems and missing assignments. She finally sought a neurologist's care, and despite all that could be offered then (and there isn't a lot more now) she never regained her higher function. She lost her job (and had been on the fast track for promotion due to her exceptional people and organizational skills), and even though I lost contact with her family over the next decade, I heard that she was divorced, unable to find very productive work, and was having her mother help with rearing the children and manage her household. This was no slacker. She ended up an entirely different person, affecting her own future and that of her family.

I submit that this one incident can show the possible, not necessarily inevitable, outcome of a single ringing of the bell, and unless there are better ways to examine all kids before going on to the football field to see if they are susceptible (sort of like freckled red-heads sunburning easier so don't become a surfer) to select them out, or a long term higher protective set of gear they can wear or a change in rules to prevent the injuries, we owe it to our kids to return to the relative un-importance of football as it was forty or more years ago.

Make it a club sport, not associated with school, and let families enter knowingly into allowing their family's future go play on the field.” Reid

http://m.startribune.com/comments/363470001/


“Almost all the daughters of our close friends and family who are playing K - 12 or club sports have had at least one concussion. I don't recall any girl I knew or knew of having a concussion when I was that age. Of the women I knew in college who played intramural sports I don't recall any of them getting a concussion. How the hell do we allow girls sports to become so aggressive that 12 and 13 year old girls are routinely getting head trauma from participating? There is nothing you gain by playing young adult sports that is worth these type of injuries.” Always Puzzled

http://m.startribune.com/comments/363470001/

Posted: Sat Jan 09, 2016 4:34 am
by greybeard58
Alexy Dresel
“There’s a blunt honest that can only come from a family member.

Do something well and that family member will tell you so. Mess something up and that same person will be sure to let you know it.

Kailey, Alexy and Bayleigh Dresel have grown up through the youth hockey ranks using that matter-of-fact truthfullness with each other with the best intentions in mind. Now, the trio of cousins is playing together at the varsity level for the Chi-Hi/Menomonie girls hockey team and making an impact.

Kaily, a three-year varsity player as a junior, is second on the team in goals (six) an total points (10), trailing team leader Kaylee Frenette in both categories. Kaily has already tied her season-high in person with the season just hitting its midpoint.

“We know each other, we know where we are,” Kailey said of playing alongside her two younger cousins. “We’re not afraid to tell each other when we do something wrong.”

Alexy, a sophomore, is sixth on the team with five points despite missing time due to a concussion and has already matched her point totals from 24 games last season.

“I think it helps that we know how to talk to each other without putting the other person down and we know how to work with each other on the ice,” Alexy said.”

Chi-Hi/Menomonie’s Dresel Cousins Embrace Chance To Play Together
Read more: http://m.chippewa.com/sports/high-schoo ... touch=true

Jack Jablonski Fund

Posted: Sat Jan 09, 2016 4:36 am
by greybeard58
Jack Jablonski Fund

Another seriously injured hockey player

http://www.jabby13.com/

The Denna Laing Team

Posted: Sun Jan 10, 2016 5:15 pm
by greybeard58
The Denna Laing Team
On behalf of Denna, our Mom & Dad, and the entire extended Laing family we want to thank everyone that has reached out to Denna. We will be using this Facebook page and the www.dennalaing.org website to update her progress. During this time, we still ask for privacy but want to keep everyone updated on her status and this will be our platform to do so.

Denna has completed just over a week in the Intensive Care Unit at Mass General Hospital receiving care from an incredibly dedicated and talented group of doctors, nurses, physician assistants, and therapists. We can’t thank them enough for all that they are doing for Denna.

As you know Denna was rushed to Mass General from the NWHL’s Outdoor Women’s Classic on New Years Eve and immediately underwent emergency surgery to repair several fractured and shattered vertebrae. The operation lasted over 7 hours. Since then, the breathing tube that she needed initially has been removed and a tracheostomy was performed which should help her breathing and allow her to speak soon. Fortunately, our cousin Kelly Ross has been constantly at her bedside and has developed into an expert lip reader. Additionally, Denna has been constantly battling the effects of a spinal cord injury trauma such as pneumonia, muscle spasms, fever and other symptoms related to the injury. During this time, Denna has shown some movement in her left arm, limited movement in her right arm, and no feeling below the chest. Denna has expressed a desire to start communicating directly with the assistance of us and other family members as soon as possible. It’s hard to see Denna in this state, but she remains positive and strong, which helps us through this difficult time.

We sincerely appreciate all your well wishes and continued prayers,

From Brianna and Lexie Laing
‪#‎2Denna4ever‬

4 more stories

Posted: Mon Jan 11, 2016 7:55 am
by greybeard58
Coach Katharine aka Nana
“My coach was Katharine, aka Nana, who was a goalie who was sitting out that particular season because of a concussion. Saying that, though, the teammates I had that season were also terrific, affirmative coaches! I only wish all new players could be so lucky. I'm doing my best to pay it forward.”

MJ Bonevelle’s Recreational Hockey Blog
Read more: http://www.womenshockeylife.com/blogs_v ... 0&CatId=11


Jenn Gilligan
“Over the past four seasons, Syracuse head coach Paul Flanagan had run a two-goalie rotation with Kallie Billadeau and Jenesica Drinkwater. One goalie started around 20 games and the other recorded starts a handful fewer each year.

But at the beginning of this season, Flanagan had three options in net: Gilligan, a transfer from New Hampshire who hadn’t played a game in 18 months, Cariddi, who joined the team last year after playing on SU’s women’s club ice hockey team and Abbey Miller, a freshman.
Gilligan’s athleticism and experience set her apart from the other two and she got the start right away.

Her only absence of the season came when a concussion knocked her out of three straight practices in October and the game that Saturday. But by Sunday, Gilligan was back in net.

“I’m surprised my body has held up as well as it has, playing the amount of minutes that I have,” Gilligan said. “Hopefully it can hold itself together for a few more weeks.”

Gilligan Continues To Protect Net As Regular Season Ends After Seizing Starting Role For Orange
Read more: http://dailyorange.com/2015/02/gilligan ... or-orange/


Ivy League Concussions
“ The Ivy League's new concussion public service announcement will make its national television debut this Saturday as part of the FS1 broadcast of the Princeton at Penn men's basketball game scheduled for a 4:30 p.m. tipoff.

The 30-second piece features student-athletes from all eight Ivy League schools emphasizing the importance of reporting symptoms that could indicate a concussion. As well as being part of the FS1 broadcast, the public service announcement can be seen during this week's slate of live broadcasts on The Ivy League Digital Network.

Since 2010, the Ivy League has assumed a leadership role in concussion research, prevention and education in college athletics. The League has adopted recommendations across the sports of football, men's and women's ice hockey, men's and women's lacrosse and men's and women's soccer to limit concussive and subconcussive hits and place an emphasis on education. Since 2012, the League has been working in partnership with the Big Ten Conference and the Big Ten Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC) in a co-sponsored, cross-institutional research collaboration to study the effects of head injuries in sports.

This public service announcement brings home the point that education remains a key component of mitigating the potential short- and long-term ramifications of repetitive brain trauma.”

Ivy League Concussion PSA To Make National Television Debut On FS1
Read more: http://www.ivyleaguesports.com/sports/m ... 0106pv6evy


Anna Wright and Victoria Hummel
“The University of Maine women’s hockey team is regaining players after being ravaged by injuries during the first half of the season.

The 7-13-1 Black Bears, who haven’t played since Dec. 12, host Hockey East rival Vermont for games at 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.

UMaine coach Richard Reichenbach said he has never coached a team that has had to endure this many injuries.

“We had 15 forwards, and we were down to nine at one time,” said Reichenbach. “We had to change the way we play.”

He said that when they had a full complement of players, they would rotate four lines and six defensemen “to keep our energy high and enables us to forecheck effectively.”

Junior Kristin Gilmour, the team’s second-leading scorer among defensemen a year ago with two goals and three assists, hasn’t played a game this season. She underwent hip surgery last spring and will have two years of eligibility left beginning next season.

Senior forward and captain Abbey Cook played in 16 games with two goals and an assist before breaking her leg and having surgery. Reichenbach hopes to have her back for the playoffs.

Freshman defenseman Lydia Murray had season-ending shoulder surgery after eight games; senior forward Jillian Langtry (1 & 4) missed six games because of knee surgery and returned to the lineup on Dec. 11; All-Hockey East honorable mention senior defenseman Kelsey MacSorley also returned for the Union series after missing 14 games with a back ailment; and forwards Anna Wright and Victoria Hummel were sidelined with concussions although both are now back.

Forward Catherine Tufts (4 & 1) has suffered a recent shoulder injury that could sideline her.”

UMaine Women’s Hockey Team Seeks Better Health For Second Half
Read more: http://bangordailynews.com/2016/01/07/s ... cond-half/

newsweek article

Posted: Mon Jan 11, 2016 7:56 am
by greybeard58

video

Posted: Mon Jan 11, 2016 7:58 am
by greybeard58
Best question: Would you like this to happen to your child?

Watch: Attorney Jason Luckasevic - The Risk of Concussion Litigation for Universities
https://vimeo.com/139064559?utm_source= ... _campaign=