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Delaware Head Athletic Trainer Dan Watson Honored for Outstanding Service by NATA

Article reposted from Delaware Blue Hens
Author: Delaware Athletics

University of Delaware head athletic trainer and assistant director of athletics Dan Watson has been honored by the National Athletic Trainers Association for his service to the organization and the outstanding work in the profession.

Watson, who has served at the University for the past 12 years, was selected to receive the Athletic Training Service Award. This prestigious national award recognizes NATA members for their exceptional contributions to the profession and the Association as well as their participation and leadership on the local and state levels. Members are eligible for this award after 20 years of membership and certification.

NATA award recipients will be recognized during the General Session at the 2017 NATA Convention in Houston on June 28.

“This is a special honor and I am grateful to be recognized on the national level for my service, leadership, and advancement of the Athletic Training profession,” said Watson. “We take great pride here at the University of Delaware in our reputation as one of the top athletic training programs in the country and none of this could be accomplished without the extraordinary dedication and passion of our athletic training staff and students.”

A native Delawarean, Watson earned his degree in athletic training with honors from Delaware in 1995 and his master’s degree in education, athletic training, and sports medicine from the University of Virginia in 1996.

After his graduation from Delaware, he served on the athletic training staffs at Virginia, Hampden-Sydney (Va.) College, Yale University, and Rutgers University before returning to his alma mater in 2004. He served as assistant athletic trainer and associate head athletic trainer before being named head athletic trainer in 2013.

He has presented a variety of topics at numerous conferences, including at the NATA Annual Symposium. He previously served as Clinical Coordinator of the UD ATEP and as President of the DATA.

Watson and his wife, Minda, reside in Newark with their son, Jude.

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Delaware ATEP Wins Bill Cramer Professional Development Award

The University of Delaware Athletic Training Education Program (ATEP) has been selected for the 2016 Bill Cramer Professional Development Award. UD was chosen out of 360 schools with athletic training programs for this annual recognition that is given to only one school in the nation.

“This speaks volumes as to the quality of our students and the commitment they’ve made to better themselves as athletic training professionals,” said program director Tom Kaminski. “This is a great spotlight for all the things good about UD ATEP!”

Students commit 200 observation hours during the freshman year and are then required to participate in at least 200 clinical hours per semester from sophomore to senior year while under the supervision of a certified athletic trainer or qualified healthcare professional. In the industry’s professional examination — the Board Certification for the Athletic Trainer —  UD students boast a 94.4 percent first-time pass rate, a score well above the national average. In addition to an impressive first round, overall pass rate for the last seven years is 100 percent.

Each student is an active member in the Student Athletic Trainers’ Club (SATC). The club strives to promote and educate the community on skills developed at UD. SATC holds events at the local athletic organizations to teach coaches and parents important taping and bracing techniques, emergency management skills and proper equipment fitting.

The designation comes with professional development funds, which faculty can disperse among undergraduate Athletic Training students during the 2016-17 academic year.

“Especially in the healthcare field, continuing education and professional development is critical,” said Brian Winkler, who graduated this past weekend in the Class of 2016. “This award will allow UD to send students to the National Athletic Trainers’ Association’s national conference.”

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Kaminski is an All Star Athletic Trainer

Program director. Teacher. Administrator. Athletic trainer. Editor. Researcher. That isn’t a list of positions for an entire department; those are the roles performed by one person, the University of Delaware’s Tom Kaminski.

The kinesiology and applied physiology professor keeps a busier schedule than most in the athletic training field and that’s saying something for a profession known for its long, demanding hours.

A person would need more than one of those athletics golf carts to track Kaminski down because he is all over the place – on the sidelines, in the classroom, in his office, in the Human Performance Lab, presenting across the country and around the world.

The intense dedication to his craft has earned Kaminski the highest honor bestowed by the National Athletic Trainers’ Association (NATA), the Medal for Distinguished Athletic Training Research.

In fact, the honor is so prestigious that the organization doesn’t always give it out; NATA reserves the award for those who sustain a prolific body of work in the field.

“You look at the previous athletic training researchers to win the award and can’t help but be humbled by this,” said the 2016 honoree, who is extremely proud to join his mentor David Perrin as a recipient. “I’ve been so lucky to work with so many fantastic graduate students at UD. They have really helped me push my research forward.”

Although Kaminski is currently in the spotlight for research on concussions, his work on ankles has driven his research agenda forward throughout the bulk of his career. When amajor position statement on ankle sprains was published in 2013 in the Journal of Athletic Training, it was Kaminski who was the lead author. He also co-founded the International Ankle Consortium.

He’s worked with companies like Under Armour and Footbeat on shoes and apparel aimed at improving ankle stability and function.

Kaminski began researching ankle instability when he was at the University of Virginia but when he moved on to the University of Florida, in addition to his substantial research load, Kaminski was on the sidelines for the women’s soccer program, which would go on to win a national championship.

Working with these female soccer stars sparked his interest in another study area – concussions. He was monitoring, cataloging and analyzing head impacts in soccer matches a decade and a half before the concussion issue was ever a major concern in “the beautiful game.”

In 2003, Kaminski carried that research with him to UD where, as one could guess, he’s published a paper or two.

Kaminski and UD colleague Thomas Buckley are now involved in the landmark NCAA/Department of Defense CARE Grand Alliance study, which is investigating the longitudinal impact of concussions on an athlete’s health. With 38 million U.S. children playing contact sports and close to 3.8 million reported concussions each year, this research can have an important impact.

One of Kaminski’s newest endeavors is purposeful heading education in partnership with the National Soccer Coaches Association of America.

Despite all of the research success, Kaminski admits the most gratifying aspect of his job is the interaction with students and preparing them for successful careers.

Kaminski received the NATA’s highest teaching award back in 2010, and he has guided UD’s Athletic Training Program to impressive heights.

“The program boasts a 100 percent pass rate on the board of certification exam, which, needless to say, compares very favorably to national averages,” boasts Bill Farquhar, chairperson of the Department of Kinesiology and Applied Physiology. “In addition to being nationally recognized for his scholarly work, Tom is a tireless advocate for the field of athletic training, and our students benefit tremendously from learning from him.”

Kaminski wasn’t the only Blue Hen to receive a prestigious NATA honor. Jeff Driban (athletic training, Class of 2001) won the New Investigator Award. Driban is now an assistant professor at Tufts Medical Center in Boston, and is currently focused on rheumatology.

“I’ve been very fortunate to have the support of the NATA Foundation through their master’s grant program and a doctoral scholarship,” said Driban. “I’m grateful for the experiences and support that I received and continue to receive from UD, Temple University and Tufts Medical Center.”

During the upcoming NATA Clinical Symposia and Athletic Training Expo in Baltimore, Kaminski is slated to address the convention. And after his speech, the evening concludes with a UD Athletic Training alumni reunion on the Inner Harbor.

Article by Dane LaPenta

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