At-Home Safety: Injury Prevention Tips for Cheerleaders, Football Players

Aug. 4, 2010
With kids preparing to go back to school and football practice already underway in many communities, the American Association of Neurological Surgeons (AANS) is issuing an injury prevention message about football and cheerleading.

“The annual incidence of football-related concussion in the United States is estimated at 300,000 and nearly 45,000 football-related head injuries were serious enough to be treated at U.S. hospital emergency rooms in 2009,” said Gail L. Rosseau, a Chicago-area neurosurgeon and AANS spokesperson.

Although head injuries and concussions associated with football have been well publicized and subject to recent Congressional hearings, there is less public awareness about the neurological injuries associated with cheerleading. While these injuries are less prevalent, they can be just as devastating.

Cheerleading has changed drastically in the last 20 years and has become a highly acrobatic sport. A number of schools at the high school and college level have limited the types of stunts that can be attempted by their cheerleaders. Rules and safety guidelines now apply to both practice and competition.

Addressing Risks

“While football is a collision sport with inevitable risks, most serious neurological injuries can be prevented if players, parents and coaches take injury prevention and concussions seriously,” stated Mitchel S. Berger, M.D., AANS vice president and a member of the NFL Head, Neck and Spine Medical Committee.

“Football players who have sustained a concussion need to be withheld from play until all physical and neuropsychological symptoms and signs related to that concussion have resolved and they are cleared to return to play through an independent healthcare professional,” said Berger.

The National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research tracks a number of head and neck injury statistics related to football and cheerleading annually. AANS offered some of these statistics as well as prevention tips for football players and cheerleaders:

Football Injury Statistics

• During the 2009 football season, there were nine brain injuries that resulted in incomplete recovery. All nine were at the high school level.
• Studies show that while 10 to 15 percent of high school athletes playing contact sports sustain concussions each year, only a fraction receive proper treatment. 

• A majority of catastrophic spinal cord injuries (SCIs) occur in games. During the 2009 season, five injuries took place in games, two in practice, and two in scrimmage games.
• Both past and present data show that the football helmet does not cause cervical spine injuries; rather it is poorly executed tackling and blocking techniques that are the major problem.

Football Injury Prevention Tips

• All players should receive preseason physical exams and those with a history of prior brain or spinal injuries, including concussions, should be identified.
• Football players should receive adequate preconditioning and strengthening of the head and neck muscles.
• Coaches and officials should discourage players from using the top of their football helmets as battering rams when blocking, hitting, tackling and ball carrying. 

• Coaches, physicians and trainers should ensure that the players’ equipment is properly fitted, especially the helmet, and that straps are always locked.
• Coaches must be prepared for a possible catastrophic SCI and the entire staff must know what to do in such a case.
• The rules prohibiting spearing should be enforced in practice and games.
• Ball carriers should be taught to not lower their heads when making contact with the tackler to avoid helmet-to-helmet collisions.

Cheerleading Injury Statistics

• The majority (96 percent) of the reported concussions and closed-head injuries were preceded by the cheerleader performing a stunt.
• Nearly 90 percent of the most serious fall-related injuries were sustained while the cheerleaders were performing on artificial turf, grass, traditional foam floors or wood floors.
• A 14-year-old female high school cheerleader suffered a fractured skull when her teammates did not catch her during a stunt. She has recovered.
• A female high school cheerleader fractured her skull during a basket toss in the school cafeteria. She landed on her head and was taken to the hospital. She has recovered.
• A 17-year-old girl suffered a compression neck fracture at C-5 when her cheerleading teammate fell off the pyramid on top of her.

Cheerleading Injury Prevention Tips

• Restrictions have been placed on stunts, including height restrictions in human pyramids, the thrower-flyer ratio and the number of spotters that must be present for each person lifted above shoulder level. These rules must be enforced at all times.
• Cheerleaders must be given proper training with supervision provided during all stunts.
• Mats should be used during practice sessions and as much as possible during competitions. Cheerleaders should not attempt a stunt if they are tired, injured, ill or outside during inclement weather.
• After sustaining an injury, a health care professional must clear a cheerleader for return to activity.

The AANS offers more in-depth information on sports-related injuries and prevention on its Web site in the Conditions and Treatments and Patient Safety Tips pages.

About the Author

Laura Walter

Laura Walter was formerly senior editor of EHS Today. She is a subject matter expert in EHS compliance and government issues and has covered a variety of topics relating to occupational safety and health. Her writing has earned awards from the American Society of Business Publication Editors (ASBPE), the Trade Association Business Publications International (TABPI) and APEX Awards for Publication Excellence. Her debut novel, Body of Stars (Dutton) was published in 2021.

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