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Finding ways to fund athletic trainers

Editor’s note: Nancy Justis is a former competitive swimmer and collegiate sports information director. She is a partner with Justis Creative Communications.

My last column discussed the bill currently being considered in the Iowa House requiring high schools to have a certified medical staff person present at all “contact” sport events.

The law’s implementation will not be a huge stress on larger school districts, though all districts feel the budget crunch. It will be particularly difficult, however, for smaller districts to pay for such a program despite the need to keep our students safe and healthy.

The Waterloo School District, for example, has an agreement with Cedar Valley Medical Specialists to provide athletic trainers to West and East high schools with additional support to the four middle schools.

The district funding for this program is through the general operating budget. For the 2016-17 school year, payment is $47,400. That’s not an insignificant amount.

The National Athletic Trainers’ Association has reported schools employing athletic trainers have been able to show cost savings of as much as $80,000 a year to students and their families.

“Administrators can use this information to explain why employing an athletic trainer has value to the athlete, school and community, including decreased absenteeism, decreased lost game days, decreased parental concern and increased participation in school …,” the NATA reports.

NATA goes on to say possible ways of employing a trainer include a full-time person, a teacher who also is a trainer, a district trainer or a contracted trainer from a local sports medicine clinic.

“In situations where a full-time AT is not initially financially possible, a split position, combining AT duties with teaching, has traditionally been the most common approach,” NATA reports.

NATA notes finding “like-minded individuals who will help advocate for sports safety and assist in raising awareness and fundraising” is important. Suggestions for those advocates include parents, booster clubs and other parent groups; school board members; superintendents and principals; service organizations; local hospitals and physician groups; EMTs and ambulance companies; local professional teams; and national and local retailers and business owners.

In order to raise awareness of the need, NATA suggests asking a reporter to write an article about the issue, host a letter-writing campaign to advocate for the initiative, host a safety awareness night, create a petition and ask the school to apply for Safe Sports School Award (www.nata.org/safe-sports-school-award).

Fundraising ideas include increasing athletic fees with a portion dedicated to supporting sports medicine programs, asking for a percentage of gate and concession revenues, soliciting business donations, asking for equipment and supplies donations and asking for service donations, such as EMS coverage.

Don’t overlook local, state or federal grant moneys. For example, the NFL Foundation, NATA and Gatorade provided a funding opportunity in 2015 — the Athletic Trainer Initiative — that helped schools fund $50,000 for an athletic trainer.

I am hoping the Iowa law passes. There’s little else more important than our children’s safety.

l Let us know what you think by contacting Justis at njustis@cfu.net

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Bill would require athletic trainer at Iowa varsity sporting events

Iowa high schools would be required to employ a certified athletic trainer at certain varsity sporting events to identify concussions in student-athletes under legislation that advanced Wednesday in the Iowa Senate.

The host school would be required to supply a trainer at all varsity football, wrestling and boys and girls soccer events, according to the bill.

“We’re trying to protect our student-athletes across the state of Iowa,” said Sen. Tod Bowman, D-Maquoketa, a former high school wrestling coach.

Currently, if schools are able to provide athletic trainers at athletic events, those trainers have final authority on identifying concussion symptoms and determining whether a student-athlete should be removed from a contest.

When a trainer is not present, a student-athlete may be removed from a contest for a concussion by his or her coach or an official.

Bowman said trainers are preferable because they are professionally trained to identify and treat concussions and are not potentially motivated to allow an injured student-athlete to remain in a contest for competitive reasons.

“(The bill would) take the coach out of the uncomfortable position where there might be a conflict of interest and allow a professional to make a decision,” Bowman said.

Bowman acknowledged potential concern from schools with a mandate that would create costs.

It would cost roughly $2,400 to $3,900 per year, depending on the trainer’s rate, for schools that sponsor all four sports — football, wrestling and boys and girls soccer — to have a certified trainer at those varsity events, according to figures compiled by Doug Struyk, of the Iowa Athletic Trainers’ Society. Struyk used industry rates and schedule data from the governing bodies of Iowa’s high school athletics.

Troy Kleiss, with the Iowa Athletic Trainers’ Society, said there are not enough trainers in Iowa to meet the demand the legislation would create, but he thinks the market would adjust to meet the need for more trainers.

The legislation would encourage — but not require — schools to have a trainer at all other sporting events.

The bill advanced Wednesday and is eligible to be considered by the Senate’s Education Committee.

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