This is Scientific American 60-Second Mind, I'm Ingrid Wickelgren. Got a minute?
Brain injury is a growing concern in football.
But changes during practice could make the game safer for kids by cutting total blows to the head in half.
So finds the largest study ever to measure head impacts in youth football.
The work is in the Annals of Biomedical Engineering.
Researchers put accelerometers in the helmets of 50 9- to 12-year-olds on three teams to detect forces on the head.
For kids on two teams, practice was far riskier than games:
they got more than twice as many whacks to the skull at practice than in games.
The more hits, the greater the chance of brain injury.
But the third team got knocked in the noggin only half as often as the others, and the difference was entirely from workouts.
That team not only practiced less but their sessions were safer:
players followed new Pop Warner rules that restrict the number of contact drills and outlaw the roughest ones.
During actual games, however, contact was the same for all players,
which shows that protecting kids in practice doesn't change the product on the field.
That can stay as brutal as we like.
Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American 60-Second Mind. I'm Ingrid Wickelgren.
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