Chatting with Dr Ralph Cornwell about prevention, his work and research down the years, NFL, Baseball, migraines and much more...
Great interview
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Chatting with Dr Ralph Cornwell about prevention, his work and research down the years, NFL, Baseball, migraines and much more...
Great interview
The Head Neck and Spine Institute. www.concussionpreventionprotocol.com
There are many different types of Athletes that perform at a High-performance level on a daily basis. You have the Military athlete, serving our country. the Fire and Police athlete and of course t…
It’s been said that “life is what happens to us when we are busy making other plans.” UnKnown
CAN CONCUSSIONS BE PREVENTED? There are several means by which Concussions can be prevented. 1) If all organized activities were prohibited, Concussions could be Prevented. 2) Federal Legislation…
Strength Training the Head and Neck turned 11 today!
Strength Training the Head and Neck turned 11 today!
With more awareness comes more testing, recognizing early symptoms, and deployment of preventative measures across all levels of sports.
https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6685263675768500224/
Once again, the "experts" believe if you put a hard shell cover over and around the skull with the human brain encased within, concussions will decrease. Our knowledge that movement inside the skull/ cranial space where the brain resides cannot be counteracted by some sort of padded helmet. Despite this known ineffectiveness, blind ignorance remains. A helmet would be a very beneficial addition to women's lacrosse with the goal of reducing skull fractures or facial lacerations. Any protection beyond those already mentioned would give a false sense of security and protection from subconcussive and concussive forces. Statical data can be manipulated to serve your desired research outcome, but at what cost.?Yes to helmets, to keep the female safer from being struck by a lacrosse stick, no to using athletes as potential grant money reservoirs.