Sports Unite to Implement Key Concussion Management and Prevention Recommendations

Sports representatives are gathering in Dublin to collaborate on developing a unified approach to the implementation of key recommendations made by the Berlin concussion in sport group.

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Sports representatives are gathering in Dublin today to collaborate on developing a unified approach to the implementation of key recommendations made by the Berlin concussion in sport group.

The important workshop, hosted by World Rugby, will bring together medics from Rugby, Rugby League, the NFL, Ice Hockey, and Australian Rules Football. It will be a major step towards a standardized approach to head injury prevention and management in sport and demonstrates the commitment of sports to work together to advance the welfare of athletes at all levels of participation.

The Berlin statement, covering 12 questions, is a significant guidance document for all sports and is the result of a detailed review of more than 60,000 scientific papers reviewed by expert groups, including neurologists, neuropsychologists, neuropathologists, sports physicians and researchers.

This review and the latest concussion consensus statement delivered by the Concussion in Sports Group (CISG) made a number of key recommendations and includes an update on the Concussion Recognition Tool (CRT5), the Sport Concussion Assessment Tool (SCAT5) and the Child Sport Concussion Assessment Tool (Child SCAT5), all three of which are currently being employed in a large number of sport federations and professional leagues:

The need for sports to adopt an evidence-based approach The importance of the Recognize and Remove principle Any athlete with suspected concussion must be immediately removed from competition The SCAT tool currently represents the most well-established and rigorously developed instrument for sideline assessment The importance of early exercise in return to play protocolsWorld Rugby joined other sports in welcoming the publication of the statement, which demonstrates that rugby’s approach continues to be aligned with recommended best practice. However, while providing consensus guidance of what sports should do, it does not offer guidance on how to implement its recommendations, which is why sports are keen to collaborate.

World Rugby Chairman Bill Beaumont, said: "Concussion is a top priority for all sports and rugby continues to collaborate with other sports and leading medical and scientific experts to ensure the very best programs are implemented to protect participants at all levels."

World Rugby Chief Medical Officer Dr Martin Raftery said: "The 2016 Berlin Concussion Consensus Statement is a significant and welcome development for sport and society in the priority area of concussion. It provides an excellent guide for all sports covering recognition, management, prevention, research and new knowledge for concussive events.

"We collectively believe that a collaborative approach to adoption of the Consensus recommendations by sports would improve the welfare and safety of our players and we look forward to determining ways to harmonise our interpretation of the Berlin Consensus Statement recommendations and exchange and share information and identify areas for further collaboration."

The meetings are hoped to codify a standard approach that will see athlete welfare benefits driven across all sports and beyond our own evidence-based prevention, management, and research initiatives, we welcome efforts from all sections of society designed to promote informed discussion around the issue of concussion. Player welfare remains the number one priority for World Rugby.

For more information, please contact:

DOMINIC RUMBLES

Head of Communications, World Rugby

Tel: +353-86-8520-826

Email: dominic.rumbles@worldrugby.org

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