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The Air Force Academy takes to the sky for athlete safety

Football coaches have long enjoyed the benefit of assistants perched in the press box providing a more comprehensive view of the action than what is available to those on the sidelines.

Air Force is going to grant that same luxury to its training staff this year.

The Falcons will place two certified athletic trainers from its staff in a press box room for each home game. The trainers will have access to a video feed directly from the television truck that will be equipped with a digital recording device that will allow them to review plays. They’ll also have binoculars to track the action and will have communication headsets similar to what coaches use along with a direct phone line to the sidelines to alert the on-field trainers when a player needs to be removed from the action.

“There are times on the field where we may not be able to see because players on the field are blocking us or maybe we’re busy tending to somebody else,” Air Force’s head athletic trainer for football Erick Kozlowski said. “We’ll now have two more sets of eyes up in the press box looking down to give us an extra hand on whatever we need.

Some conferences have already implemented similar procedures to include more medical personnel on the action.

The Big Ten and SEC will each employ unaffiliated trainers with the power to buzz officials to stop play and remove a player after a suspected injury. The Mountain West has not adopted a policy yet, but it is not stopping its members from trying new ways of preventing serious injuries.

“If it helps one guy then it’s absolutely worth it,” coach Troy Calhoun said.

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http://gazette.com/air-force-football-medical-staff-gains-eyes-in-the-press-box/article/1558671

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Air Force Academy takes part in nation-wide concussion study

Hundreds of basic cadets lined up at the Air Force Academy July 13 to help experts learn more about head trauma.

All Academy cadets are taking part in a three-year, $30M collaboration between the Defense Department and the NCAA to study concussions. Eighteen universities in the United States and the military service academies are participating in the research project.

The study coincides with the White House Summit on sports concussions, a presidential commission created in May 2014 to encourage the identification, treatment and prevention of serious head injuries.

Each basic cadet spent about an hour in a Fairchild Hall laboratory completing   concussion history and symptom inventories, and balance, memory and cognitive tests.

“The collected results of these evaluations will be compiled into a database and form a baseline of a cadet’s complete physical assessment,” said Col. Darren Campbell, director of the Academy’s Concussion Center.

“By having a baseline, we then have something to compare when they are injured,” Campbell said. “We know what their ‘norm’ should look like.”

This baseline is collected by computer-based neurocognitive assessments and one-on-one testing of brain and balance performance given when cadets are healthy, and compared to results when a cadet returns to duty or to the athletic field.

Intercollegiate athletes at the Academy account for about 50 percent of concussions reported in the Cadet Wing, said Lt. Cmdr. Brian Johnson, a behavioral science professor at the Academy.

“Regardless of participation in the national research study, all cadets are given the same level of care,” Johnson said. “We treat every cadet the same and we focus on this issue for long-term effect.”

To comply with NCAA standards, the Academy has conducted neurocognitive testing on its athletes for more than 10 years. The Academy began testing all freshmen in 2014 as part of the DOD-NCAA study to collect a larger test group.

“By using the same measures as the other sites, we can (compile) our data to paint a much clearer picture of what concussions and recovery times look like,” said Dr. Chris D’Lauro, a professor in the Academy’s Behavioral Science Department.

Steve Broglio is an associate professor in exercise science at the University of Michigan, and the lead clinical care coordinator for the universities taking part in the study. The information collected by this testing could prove beneficial years in the future, he said.

“The big goal here is to track people,” he said. “We’re trying to track the student. This is incredibly challenging and exciting.”

Campbell said tracking a cadet’s head injury is part of caring for Airmen.

“We want to provide the best medical care possible to our Airmen and cadets,”
Campbell said. “This testing provides a foundation for our research and gives us the data needed to provide the best health care possible.”

The Academy is ahead of the other universities and other military academies involved in the study because it’s conducting this baseline testing for the entire study body, said Dr. Jerry McGinty, director of sports medicine for the Academy’s Athletic Department.

All basic cadets are scheduled to be tested by July 31st.

More than 37,000 intercollegiate athletes and service members will be tested, McGinty said.

Visit www.usafa.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123420140 for more information on the study.

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