tnt said:
I hate to hop in here but while football leads in youth sports injuries the fact is when it comes to concussions Girls soccer is the leader (by a bunch) When it comes to serious injuries/deaths Soccer (Boys) followed by Soccer (girls) and then cheerleading all beat football.
Girls are known not to be developed enough to play soccer (which they don't in many parts of the world. Their upper spines and necks are weak enough that heading or a minor twist can cause very serious concussions....
I'd like to see where you got your numbers because every study i have seen has football highest followed by soccer, basketball, baseball. For girls, soccer, basketball, softball. Football hands down accounting for the most concussion. The only exception to is when you add in ice hockey for both boys and girls or field hockey. The trend is relatively close between high school and college with more occurring at the collegiate level. You may be confusing the rate of concussion in total injuries is higher for girls in sports in which BOTH genders play. Also contributing to that is females having a higher rate of self-reporting injuries, especially concussions. The second study included cheerleading, and most of those injuries were at the college level, and used data collected over the past 30 years.
"In high school sports played by both sexes, girls sustained a higher rate of
concussions, and concussions represented a greater proportion of total injuries than in boys."
Concussions Among United States High School and Collegiate Athletes
Luke M. Gessel, BS*; Sarah K. Fields, JD, PhD*; Christy L. Collins, MA†; Randall W. Dick, MS, FACSM‡; R. Dawn Comstock, PhD*†
*The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH; †Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, OH; ‡National Collegiate Athletic Association, Indianapolis, IN
"The majority of concussions in high school athletes resulted from participation in football, followed by girls' soccer, boys' soccer, and girls' basketball."
Published in final edited form as:
Clin Sports Med. 2011 January ; 30(1): 1–17. doi:10.1016/j.csm.2010.08.006
The Epidemiology of Sport-Related Concussion
Daniel H. Daneshvar, MA [MD / PhD Graduate Student]a, Christopher J. Nowinski [Co-
Director, Co-Founder]b,h, Ann McKee [Co-Director, Associate Professor of Neurology and
Pathology]b,i, and Robert C. Cantu, MD [Co-Director, Clinical Professor, Chief of
Neurosurgery Service, Chairman, Director of Sports Medicine, Co-Director, Co-Founder]
b,c,d,e,f,g,h
Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA