Former NFL QB Kurt Warner's concussion message for parents (video)
- Created on Sunday, 25 March 2012 18:55
- Last Updated on 29.04.2012
- Published Date
Not all fhttps://FL players are willing to step forward and help deliver the concussion message. But high school and youth athletes are far more likely to "hear" and perhaps accept ideas about taking themselves out of a game or helping an injured teammate if the information they need comes from a professional athlete. Kurt Warner, former QB for the Arizona Cardinals, teamed with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to give concussions a voice. The Super Bowl MVP shared his story recently during the Heads Up TBI Film Festival.
Warner said, "Well, my first experience was actually when I had a concussion and it was when I was in college. That was when it really became serious to me. Before, it was just kind of something from afar, 'It's not going to happen to me, I don't need to worry about it.'
I don't think people really understand the seriousness of a concussion and the long-term effects. I think they understand, OK, it can be serious in the short term and you can have some side effects from it, you can get nauseous, some of those things. With concussions, you're never really sure. 'Hey, mom, I've got a headache, I'm just not feeling so good,' and a lot of times you just say it's no big deal.
But I think now that it's becoming more prevalent, and if your son or daughter's in a situation where contact is a part of what they do, you've got to be aware of those symptoms and really pay attention to that. When you're young you think only about today, just about tomorrow, you don't think about your future, 10, 15, 20 years down the road. I think that becomes the most important thing in understanding, with concussions, that this can have long-term effects if you don't take care of it in the short term.
Something that I've already done with my 13-year-old that plays sports, every time he lets me know something like that's going on, I'm very cautious, and I'll say, 'Hey, you're going to sit out next week. It's not your decision. It's dad's decision,' because I want to make sure that I'm protecting them. Not just to play the game, and if they want to move on and play in college, or even professionally, but really to protect them for their future so they can be all they want to be, they can accomplish everything they want to accomplish."
Source: CDC Foundation Kurt Warner on Concussions - March 25, 2011
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