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Journal Article

Citation

Shroyer J, Stewart C. Phys. Educat. 2016; 73(2): e6298.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Phi Epsilon Kappa Fraternity, Publisher Sagamore Publishing)

DOI

10.18666/TPE-2016-V73-I2-6298

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine the knowledge and opinions on concussions of high school coaches from a geographically large yet rural state in the northern Rocky Mountains of the United States. Few medical issues in sport are more important, or have had as much publicity recently, as concussions. The exposure gleaned from tragic health issues among professional athletes postconcussion has motivated college and professional sport agencies to modify and enact strict guidelines in the diagnosis and treatment of suspected concussions. Yet underdiagnosis and mistreatment by some (former University of Michigan coach in 2014) highlight the need for continued education and enforcement of the current guidelines. Obviously, when a head coach from a major NCAA Division I university still places an athlete's health in jeopardy by disregarding a head injury, it is imperative that coaches' knowledge of concussions in smaller, more rural and remote programs is considered as well. We used a commercial electronic product to survey coaches across the state. Coaches responded voluntarily with their opinions and their current knowledge of issues related to concussions. The purpose was to identify the current status of knowledge and attitudes in hopes that any weaknesses can be addressed in additional coach education opportunities.

Keywords

concussions; high school coaches; rural state; knowledge; attitudes


Language: en

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