SECTION 1.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Concussions and other mild traumatic brain injuries affect thousands of California’s high school pupil-athletes each year. Many concussions or head injuries go undetected due to a lack of recognition of symptoms or intentional underreporting of symptoms.
(b) Most concussions do not involve a loss of consciousness, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
(c) The symptoms of concussions vary, and most symptoms are not necessarily specific to concussion. Symptoms may include
dizziness, sensitivity to light, and loss of consciousness.
(d) Pupil-athletes who suffer a concussion are more likely to suffer an additional concussion than someone who has never been concussed.
(e) Children and adolescents are skeletally immature, and are thus more likely to be concussed or suffer a brain injury than adults.
(f) Many athletes want to keep playing despite a concussion or head injury. In a study published by the American Academy of Pediatrics in October 2012, 32 percent of high school football players reported that they had experienced symptoms of concussion but did not pursue medical attention.
(g) Many high schools lack the standard of care afforded to college and professional players. At the collegiate and professional level,
neurologists and other physicians are available. High schools cannot afford this. In California, coaches or athletic trainers are required to remove any player from practice or competition if that player is exhibiting signs or symptoms of a concussion or head injury.
(h) Medical experts recommend that the recovery and rehabilitation process from a concussion proceed conservatively. Experts suggest that the recovery and rehabilitation process should have six stages, which should be supervised and should last at least 24 hours each, and that athletes should be prohibited from proceeding until they are asymptomatic. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, adolescents suffer from post-concussive symptoms longer than adults or college students.
(i) Researchers agree that there is no way to “condition” the brain for hits to the head. Researchers strongly contend that hits to
the brain should be minimized as much as possible.
(j) Several academic and scientific studies have asserted that the cumulative effects of sub-concussive blows to the brain due to football may contribute to long-term brain damage and early-onset dementia, including chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).
(k) A Boston University study in 2012 studied the brains of 85 deceased athletes and military veterans with histories of repeated mild traumatic brain injuries. Eighty percent of those studied had CTE. Six of the deceased were football players who had not played past high school.
(l) In 2010, a 21-year-old University of Pennsylvania football player committed suicide. After a subsequent brain study, he was found to have early stages of CTE. The athlete had never been diagnosed with a concussion, and had never even
complained of a headache. Doctors contend that his CTE must have developed from concussions he dismissed or from the thousands of sub-concussive collisions he endured while playing football, most of which occurred while his brain was still developing.
(m) Nineteen states have banned off-season full-contact high school football practices. California allows each of its 10 sections to make its own determination. Several of those sections still allow full-contact summer and spring practices.
(n) Several states have limited full-contact practices during the preseason and regular season.
(o) Maryland and Connecticut require that a supervised return-to-play protocol be followed in the event of a concussion or head injury.