Quick, Somebody Get Me a Lawyer!

This is sad.  Do we really need to litigate for change?  The following article shows that of the 108 deaths of NCAA athletes from 1982 – 2008 (documented by the National Center for Catastrophic Sports Injury Research), 65% of them were heart related.  This means that they could have been prevented by a simple and cheap ECG exam.  The NCAA chooses not to screen the hearts of athletes.

However, the NCAA was recently for sued over the death of an athlete from a genetic sickle cell trait.  Some schools screen for this – Rice University did not.  As a result of the lawsuit, the NCAA tests for this sickle cell trait.  The sickle cell trait was responsible for 10% of deaths during this same period (1982 – 2008).  Like an ECG exam, the test for sickle cell is inexpensive ($10).

Do we really have to litigate for change or can we just take practical and inexpensive measures to protect the lives of our young athletes?

By the way, how is this for a stat . . . Italy screens the hearts of all of its young athletes.  They have reduced the incidents of sudden cardiac death by 89%.

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