The NFL’s concussion protocol has a very extensive list of requirements for a player to return and play in a game after being diagnosed with a concussion.
When a player suffers a head injury during the game, there are several steps to diagnose a concussion. A player goes into the protocol if they exhibit or report symptoms or signs suggestive of a concussion or stinger. The team’s athletic trainer, booth spotter, team physician, game official, coach, teammate, or sideline Unaffiliated Neurotrauma Consultant (UNC) can also start the protocol.
What Is a Sideline Survey?
A player will remove his helmet to allow the team doctor and UNC to examine the player. If a player has lost consciousness or displays confusion, amnesia, or a lack of muscle control, he is ruled out of the game immediately and brought to the locker room.
The next steps are to review the play that happened and ask the player the five Maddock questions:
- Where are we playing today?
- Which half/quarter is it now?
- Who scored last in this game?
- What team did we play last week/game?
- Did we win the last game?
The video of the play also gets reviewed while the player is being examined.
The next step involves a focused neurological exam of the cervical spine, an evaluation of speech, an observation of gait, and an evaluation of eye movements. After this set of tests, a player can be cleared to return or be brought back to the locker room for further examination.
In the locker room, a player undergoes a more thorough neurological exam along with a complete NFL SCAT (sports concussion assessment tool). If a player needs to pass this step to return to the game, he will be ruled out of the game.
Return-To-Participation Protocol
As soon as a player is ruled out with a concussion, he enters into the NFL’s concussion protocol and he cannot play until he passes each step. There is no set time to return to play or expected time to progress through each step of the protocol. Recovery time for concussions will vary from player to player.
Here are the five steps the NFL and NFLPA have agreed to for a player to return from a concussion:
Phase 1 (Symptom-Limited Activity)
The player is prescribed rest and told to limit or, if necessary, avoid activities (both physical and cognitive) that increase or aggravate symptoms. Under athletic training staff supervision, limited stretching and balance training can be introduced, progressing to light aerobic exercise, all as tolerated.
Phase 2 (Aerobic Exercise)
Under direct oversight of the team’s medical staff, the player should begin graduated cardiovascular exercise and may also engage in dynamic stretching and balance training. Neurocognitive and balance testing can be administered after completion of Phase 2, and the results should be interpreted as back to baseline.
Phase 3 (Football-Specific Exercise)
The player continues with supervised cardiovascular exercises that are increased and may mimic sport-specific activities, and supervised strength training is introduced. The player is allowed to practice with the team in sport-specific exercises for 30 minutes or less with ongoing and careful monitoring.
Phase 4 (Club-Based Non-Contact Training Drills)
The player continues cardiovascular, strength, and balance training, team-based sports-specific exercise, and participates in non-contact football activities (e.g. throwing, catching, running, and other position-specific activities). Neurocognitive and balance testing should be completed no later than the end of Phase Four with the results interpreted as back to baseline.
Phase 5 (Full Football Activity/Clearance)
Upon clearance by the team physician for full football activity involving contact, the player must be examined by the Independent Neurological Consultant (INC) assigned to his club. If the INC concurs with the team physician that the player’s concussion has been resolved, he may participate in his team’s next practice or game.
What New Technology Is Available to Players To Reduce Concussion Frequency and Severity?
Two particular technologies have gained traction within NFL locker rooms: Guardian Caps and the Q-collar.
Guardian Caps
Guardian Caps are soft-shell helmet covers designed to reduce concussions. Invented in 2010, they are engineered to lessen the impact of head-to-head collisions.
“We now have two years of data showing significant concussion reductions among players who wear Guardian Caps during practice, so players will be permitted to wear the cap during games this upcoming season,” NFL executive vice president Jeff Miller said in a statement.
“Additionally, there are new helmets this year that provide as much — if not more — protection than a different helmet model paired with a Guardian Cap. These developments represent substantial progress in our efforts to make the game safer for players.”
Q-Collar
The Q-Collar is the first and only FDA-cleared solution that helps protect the brain during repetitive head impacts. The Q30 website describes the Q-Collar as a non-invasive solution to brain protection.
By applying light pressure to the sides of the neck, the Q-Collar increases blood volume in the brain’s venous structures, reducing the harmful internal movement that causes brain injury. This is a direct counter to the brain moving around when the head is exposed to an impact.
While helmets play a large role in reducing serious injury to the skull by preventing direct contact and spreading the impact over a greater surface area, they don’t limit brain movement. Q30 studies show that jugular vein compression can reduce damage to brain neurons and axons — key indicators of brain injuries — by over 80%.