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Roughly Half of California Schools are Without Athletic Trainers

Article reposted from Fox 40
Author: 

According to the California Interscholastic Federation, there are more than 800,000 high school athletes in the state but California does not require schools to have certified athletic trainers at practices and games.

“Absolutely, we have to fix it. It is alarming because health and safety questions on the sidelines of a football game, or about concussions, or in a gym at a volleyball match are being made by coaches and not a medical professional,” CIF Director Roger Blake said.

The CIF has made it one of its top priorities recently to educate principals, superintendents and athletic directors on the importance of having athletic trainers because the decision to hire or not hire athletic trainers at the high school level is a district decision, just like hiring a teacher. It can cost between $50,000 to $100,000. Many schools, especially in the Sacramento region, have been told no by their districts when it comes to funding an athletic trainer.

“I don’t know how you dictate to a business that you must have this, and you must have them pay for it. So, if you look at it from a business standpoint I think it’s hard. From a ‘want’ standpoint, absolutely,” Oak Ridge High School Athletic Director Stephen White said.

The solution Oak Ridge found was to pay for an athletic trainer through its sports booster club.

“He comes here three days a week for about an hour and sees any of the kids who have injuries or nicks or bumps and bruises and evaluate if they need to get looked at further, or they’re just hurt,” White said.

Still, that means parents, volunteers and often coaches must take it upon themselves in assessing injuries, concussions, heat stroke, cardiac arrest and more. Some of those require an immediate response.

“Coaches are required to be CPR and ADA First Aid certified, but in my opinion, it’s not enough,” Turlock High School athletic trainer Mike Collins said.

Collins has been with Turlock High School as its athletic trainer since 198. He’s aware that what he’s able to provide to student-athletes is a luxury to most other California schools.

Darci Calista is one of three athletic trainers at Christian Brothers High School in Sacramento, one of the best programs in the state. The private school even educates students who want to possibly work in the medical field someday. The decision to fund the program is entirely up to the school and is a primary example of the benefits of having a trained medical professional work with student-athletes.

“I would hope people could make it more of a priority, especially with the concussion protocols,” Calista said. “I know how long it takes us, and how valuable it is to have a liaison between the doctor and the parents and the coaches and the athlete.”

One big wrinkle in the problem is that California is the only state that does not regulate the profession of athletic training, meaning anyone can call themselves an athletic trainer — whether they are certified or not.

Legislation on the matter is making its way through the State Capitol.

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California Schools falling short in hiring full-time athletic trainers

Article reposted from The San Diego Union Tribune
Author: P.K. Daniel

Last month, a spectator suffered a heart attack while attending a basketball game at Rancho Bernardo High.

Robbie Bowers — the school’s certified athletic trainer, also known as an AT— was working the game. He and his staff put their emergency action plan into effect, utilizing the school’s defibrillator and CPR to save the elderly man’s life.

Unlike at Rancho Bernardo and other high schools in the Poway district, few student-athletes — let alone fans — in the CIF’s San Diego Section enjoy the safety and benefits of a full-time certified athletic trainer.

According to a 2015 story by CBS Sacramento, 80 percent of California high schools don’t employ full-time athletic trainers, whose job is to collaborate with physicians in providing preventive and emergency care, diagnosis, rehabilitation and other medical services.

Additionally, not all trainers are certified. And none are licensed in California.

“In California, anyone can say they are an ‘athletic trainer’ regardless of educational preparedness or skill,” said Tom Abdenour, longtime AT with the Golden State Warriors and former SDSU athletic trainer. “Needless to say, this can put a young student-athlete at risk if the wrong person does the wrong thing at the wrong time.”

California is the only state that does not recognize athletic trainers as licensed health-care practitioners. It doesn’t regulate the industry or define its scope of practice.

The California Athletic Trainers’ Association (CATA) has been campaigning for the passage of legislation since the mid-’80s. The most recent measure in 2015 would have restricted use of the title “athletic trainer” to only those individuals who have fulfilled the requirements for certification by a national body.

The bill had unanimous support in the legislature but was vetoed by Gov. Jerry Brown, who said certification imposes unnecessary burdens on athletic trainers without sufficient evidence that certain levels of education are needed.

As it stands, certification requires a bachelor’s degree with 70 percent of athletic trainers holding a master’s degree. According to Brown, the “burdens” outweigh the risk of having unlicensed trainers.

Mike Chisar is chairman of CATA’s Governmental Affairs Committee. He said the association has provided incidents of harm but pointed out the challenge of documentation since uncertified athletic trainers generally don’t keep medical records.

“You would hate for a kid to die to make (Brown) go, ‘Oh, there’s harm here or there’s the potential for harm by having somebody who’s not trained making (medical) decisions,’” Chisar said.

Alaska recently joined an increasing number of states (including Texas, Hawaii, Utah, Arizona, New York and Massachusetts) that require out-of-state trainers practicing in their state to be licensed, prompting new licensure legislation to be introduced this month in California.

The California Interscholastic Federation, the state’s governing body for high school sports, has safety guidelines on several issues. When it enacted concussion management and return-to-play protocols, it was complying with state law. But mandating full-time athletic trainers at every high school is beyond the CIF’s purview. Personnel and staffing decisions are under the local control of elected school boards.

Certification and licensing issues aside, a lack of funding is often cited as the reason ATs are not required.

“I think it really comes down to resources,” said Bowers, the outgoing secondary schools chairman for CATA. “In the past, I think there was confusion as to what an athletic trainer was/does, but I think through education that perception is becoming more clear and (schools) are desiring an athletic trainer. How to pay for it has become the bigger issue.”

Until this school year, San Diego Unified, the second-largest school district in California, did not have athletic trainers at each of its 16 high schools that have athletic programs. But district backing, including $416,000 in funding, allowed Scott Giusti, director of PE, health and athletics, to contract with UC San Diego to hire part-time certified athletic trainers.

“I cannot stress enough what a great thing this has been for our students and our schools,” Giusti said.

The CIF’s San Diego Section does ensure that athletic trainers are at most postseason competitions.

“At CIF events, we either require or provide trainers,” section Commissioner Jerry Schniepp said.

This year, the San Diego Section started a health and safety advisory committee composed of physicians, athletic trainers and school administrators.

“We are trying to provide for all schools a best-practices guideline on athletic training issues, head injuries, etc.,” Schniepp said.

San Diego schools and districts have dealt with the issue of athletic trainers in different ways. In 2015, CATA conducted a survey in which only 33 of more than 100 San Diego Section schools participated. Ten schools had no athletic trainer, six had an uncertified athletic trainer and 17 schools had at least one certified athletic trainer. Chisar said the employment status ran the gamut from attendance at football games only, to part time to full time. In the San Diego sample, 13 trainers were full time, eight were part time and two were football only.

The Grossmont district allots $10,000 to each of its nine comprehensive high schools as part of the annual athletic trainer budget, allowing each school to hire a part-time trainer.

“We strive to hire certified athletic trainers,” said Brian Wilbur, director of athletics for the Grossmont district. “In many cases, the trainer is also a teacher at the school or holds another classified position.”

Sweetwater Union has placed full-time certified athletic trainers at eight of its 12 high schools, and expects to have all 12 staffed next year. The trainers teach sports medicine and physical therapy classes during the day. Their remaining hours are devoted to athletic training.

Helping to implement the program was Dr. Charles Camarata, who has devoted many years to helping South County high school athletes.

Said Camarata: “The district is on board and sees the value.”

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Athletic trainers on the sideline = safety on the field

A roll of athletic tape in and of itself is mundane, unexceptional. But the moment it’s needed to wrap sore joints before or during a sporting matchup one realizes there is a science behind knowing how to rip the tape and wrap it quickly. That’s where athletic trainers become most visible and necessary.

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) released new recommendations Oct. 25 regarding the enforcement of safe tackling and the prevention of injuries. These recommendations include making officials and coaches responsible for enforcing the rules of proper tackle technique, and making skilled and trained athletic trainers (AT) available on the sidelines.

These recommendations come from the increasing exposure of the dangers associated with head trauma caused by the sport of football. There have been 11 deaths resulting from football injuries during high school games this year, according to NBCNews.com. There have not been deaths from football in the Orange Belt in recent memory, according to California Interscholastic Federation director Jim Crichlow.

Teaching children early in life how to tackle properly will help them avoid unsafe habits early on, but the counterargument points to more contact and abuse on the body from a young age, according to the AAP. The issue with concussions in football has reached the main stream consciousness, with a film starring Will Smith called “Concussion” addressing the dangers of concussions within the National Football League as one of several examples. It’s an uncomfortable issue, one Porterville Unified School District athletic director Rich Rankin called a “Catch-22.”

Rankin also ceded something has to change with safety if football as we know will continue to be a school sport in the future. He said “it’s not headed in the right direction.”

“It’s just a growing trend of catastrophic injuries,” he said. “We’ll have to see certified doctors on the sidelines of every game.”

In an effort to reduce the risk of both concussions and general injury in the past few years, the state of California and the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) have placed some regulations that limit the amount of time high school programs can practice in pads during the week. Put into place before the 2014-15 season, CIF programs are only allowed 18 hours of practice and contact time per week. The limit on the amount of football contests during the preseason and regular season is set at 10, which was set before the start of the 2015-16 season. Teams are allowed one scrimmage that does not count as a contest.

While there has been efforts to regulate practice time, Porterville head coach Carl Scudder said there should be attention regarding the modification of equipment. He believes discarding face masks on helmets would greatly reduce the amount of head injuries because kids would no longer want to enter a tackle face first.

“The kids wouldn’t have that plastic bubble around their faces,” he said.

Though removing the face mask could reduce the number of head injuries in football players, said Dr. Cynthia LaBella, chairperson on the Council on Sports Medicine and Fitness, it could also increase the risk of facial injuries. After all, a football helmet was never designed to prevent concussions; they’re designed to reduce the risk of skull fractures. They will never stop the momentum of the brain as a result of jarring hits in football. Knowing this, LaBella said the focus should go away from changing equipment and head towards rule changes, where the CIF has already made changes.

“Rule changes have a much bigger impact on injury rates than equipment changes,” she said. “Every attempt should be made to modify the rules.”

As for ATs tied to football programs within the Orange Belt, Strathmore and Granite Hills high schools do not have certified and trained ATs. Porterville is one of three football programs that can say it has some sort of AT, Wendy Thomas-Dummar, but it is a volunteer position. Normally employed within the Burton School District, Thomas-Dummar is in her second season with Porterville, and she assisted the Granite Hills program for four years. She’s taken a trauma class normally taken by EMT students at Porterville College specifically to study the effects of football injuries and how to treat them. She will start the College of the Sequoias’ Sports Medicine program in the fall as well.

Monache calls upon Leo Cantu for its athletic training needs, and Dr. Joel Ramirez, a practicing doctor with an office in Porterville and a Lindsay High School alum, appears at all of the Cardinals’ home games and treats, diagnoses and dresses injuries to the football team for free in his own time, according to head coach Matt Mendonca. However, there is no AT tied to the Porterville Unified School District, said Rankin. Having previously had Thomas-Dummar tied to his program, Granite Hills head coach Marc Salazar said having an AT on your sideline is immensely beneficial.

“When you have a good trainer you play healthier,” he said.

The CIF mandates football coaches be trained in CPR and be able to recognize a concussion, but the coaches are not specially trained in diagnosing and treating sports injuries. Crichlow said coaches are required to go through that training every two years or whenever their first-aid card expires.

The presence of an ambulance at a football game isn’t mandatory, but one must be on-call for the game to start. However, the CIF mandates a doctor must be present and on the sideline of playoff football games, according to Crichlow.

According to a study conducted between 2006-09 by the Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago and Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, schools whose basketball and soccer programs did not have an AT available to them experienced injury rates six times higher than those schools whose programs did have an AT. However, the concussion rates for schools with an AT were eight times higher as well. Dr. LaBella said that is because schools without an AT did not have the knowledge or skills to diagnose a concussion, so naturally the rate would be much higher with someone who can diagnose that. The study administrators also hypothesized that schools with higher socioeconomic standing typically had more access to ATs than those with lower standings.

If ATs are so beneficial, how many schools across the country have access to one? In a study conducted by the National Athletic Trainers’ Association whose results were published in the Journal of Athletic Training in February of this year, researchers contacted 14,951 public secondary schools in the U.S. to see if they offered AT services for their sports. Of the 8,509 schools that responded, 70 percent reported having AT services, though most (63 percent) did not provide full-time services for all sports, games and practices. Additionally, 27 percent of those schools that responded reported offering services through a clinic.

Rankin said each football program within the district gets a stipend for nine football coaches. A head varsity football coach with at least 11 years of experience can earn approximately $5,600 per season, and a first-year head coach can earn approximately $2,900. There is nothing set aside for a specialized AT. According to the U.S. Department of Labor as of May 2014, the mean annual wage for an AT across the nation is $45,730. That number rises to $50,170 in California. In order to have one AT for all sports tied to PUSD, Rankin said it would take some coordination to make the utilization of that trainer fair for all teams.

“It’s definitely something we would look at,” he said. District administrators and school athletic directors touched on the topic at the end of 2014, but a district AT is not being considered at this time, according to Rankin. Though there has been some discussion, there are no imminent plans to bring in an AT for the district. As with all things, Rankin said the financial implications of hiring an AT are a big reason why this plan is not a reality.

While coaches have some training, Strathmore head coach Jeromy Blackwell said he’d rather have someone on his side who is much more knowledgeable than he is when it comes to treating injuries.

“It would be much better to have a person who knows how to do those things,” he said.

Not only is an AT good for diagnosing or preventing sports injuries in real time, Dr. LaBella, with Council on Sports Medicine and Fitness, said it would be useful for schools and districts to work with ATs in order to create emergency action plans for a truly catastrophic injury in any sport.

“If you’re going to have a sports program,” she said, “the budget needs to be there for an athletic trainer.”

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
http://www.recorderonline.com/sports/trainers-on-sidelines-equal-safety-on-the-field/article_8b49db76-8cec-11e5-9eca-db2eadf41536.html

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California High Schools Under Fire For Lack Of Certified Athletic Trainers

It’s game night, but all eyes aren’t only on the players in the field. Certified athletic trainers are in the spotlight, too.

“We’re a first responder, another set of eyes pretty much,” said athletic trainer Rohit Sharma.

The guys on the sidelines are specially trained to watch for injuries when the coach can’t.

“To the common eye you see a tackle, but I might look at someone as if, OK, he got tackled but he got hit hard and his head hit the floor,” Sharma said.

They play a key role in spotting concussions, but eighty percent of California high schools don’t employ full-time athletic trainers – unlike pro and college sports.

“My son played over at Chapman and they’ve got an athletic trainer at all times. So there should be some level of that at high school football too,” said a father in the stands.

There’s no policy or law requiring high schools to hire athletic trainers Monday through Friday, so most schools only call them on game day.

Roger Blake, executive director of the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF), argues that the response to the issue has been slow due to numerous factors.

“It’s a multi-dimensional part. It really is. We haven’t educated them well enough and there’s always that issue of how are we going to pay for this,” Blake said.

He admits it’s a money issue.

“There’s a price tag to this. I mean, if there was an athletic trainer at all 1,576 schools, that means every school is going to have to hire this individual,” Blake said.

So why won’t high schools invest? California remains the only state in the nation that doesn’t recognize athletic trainers as licensed health care professionals.

The CIF is trying to push a couple bills that would properly define athletic trainers and would require athletic trainers be here at all times – not just game day.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
Combating Concussions: High Schools Under Fire For Lack Of Certified Athletic Trainers