This year, educational concussion safety programs are making headlines. The Illinois Athletic Trainers Association and the Chicago Institute of Neurosurgery and Neuroresearch have teamed up for a concussion safety awareness campaign in their state.
In the state of Maine, high schools are making a major effort in pushing for student-athlete safety when it comes to concussions and return-to-play decisions. William Heinz, MD, an orthopedist at Orthopaedic Associates in Portland, and Paul Berkner, DO, Medical Director of Health Services at Colby College, recently established the Maine Concussion Management Initiative. Its goal is to provide ImPact testing to all Maine public high schools for free.
"The (ImPact) test gives us a fingerprint of the brain, tells us how the brain is functioning from a cognitive sense," Heinz told the Portland Press Herald. "It's a very accurate way of monitoring concussions and trying to decide when kids are ready to go back to play. And that's the important thing."
To that end, a highly anticipated batting helmet from Rawlings, the S100, was tested by two All-American high school baseball teams in August, and the players gave it some pretty good reviews. With its extra padding and Polypropylene liner, the S100 is being touted as the safest batting helmet currently available.
With the American Association of Neurological Surgeons reporting almost 27,000 head injuries in amateur baseball in 2008 and the figures for 2009 still mounting, orders for the S100, which cost about $100, have increased.