New Report Reveals NFL Interference in Concussion Research

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Allan Siegel

Updated 4 months ago

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Three of the firm’s partners — including the co-founders of the Brain Injury Association of Metropolitan Washington, DC — discuss TBI litigation, the firm’s preferred attorney status with the Brain Injury Association of America, and the DC Athletic Concussion Protection Act, which attorney Joseph Cammarata drafted into law.

Ira Sherman (00:01): Your brain is like the yolk in an egg, so when you shake the egg, you don’t have to crack it. You just go like that, and the yolk is affected. I was on the board of Directors of the Brain Injury Association of America. I was treasurer of the Brain Injury Association of America. Mr. Camara and I started the DC chapter, the Affiliate of the Brain Injury Association of America, which didn’t exist. We are the preferred lawyers of the Brain Injury Association in the Washington DC Metropolitan area. And what I mean by that is, is that the Brain Injury Association of America designates individual attorneys that they recognize as being experienced in handling cases involving traumatic brain injury to determine if they have a case and make sure that it’s handled properly.

Allan Siegel (00:54): You get hurt in sports and you get sent right back into the game, or you knocked your head and you get back up and you go about your day. Nobody really thought much about those injuries a long time ago, but we did. We understood the seriousness of those types of injuries and how sometimes you could have serious ongoing effects from what is even a mild traumatic brain injury or what is often referred to as a concussion.

Joseph Cammarata (01:21): I co-founded the Brain Injury Association of Washington, DC. I drafted legislation which became law in the District of Columbia to protect youth athletes from concussion. Concussion is a brain injury, a traumatic brain injury that can cause significant harm, cognitive deficits, emotional disturbances, vision problems, hearing problems. And so it’s important to be able to do the investigation, but do the legwork that’s necessary to put together the case to establish that there has been harm, but it’s invisible, right? You can’t see it, but the impact is real. And so it’s our job to bring to life the impact and show that this is real as a result of some trauma.

A new report by ESPN’s Outside the Lines has suggested that the NFL, one of the largest funders of brain research in the United States, has worked to subtly influence research efforts and downplay the link between football and traumatic brain injury.

DC Brain Injury Lawyer

While the NFL donates more than $100 million to research that seems altruistic on the surface, the organization has attempted to funnel much of that money back to scientists with NFL affiliations. Furthermore, the investigation has revealed that they have reneged on contributions when researchers have come up with data that the NFL didn’t like. In light of this information, some are even comparing the NFL to Big Tobacco in the days when cigarette manufacturers spent millions to fund studies and research that denied the links between cigarette smoking and severe health consequences.

The latest issue to arise concerns the use of impact-tracking sensors in football players’ helmets, which, although shown to be 96 percent accurate at detecting the location and severity of an impact, have been rejected by NFL researchers as “flawed” and not fit for use. According to a biomedical engineer at Purdue University, the idea that the sensors should not be used at all simply because they do not provide 100 percent accuracy is the wrong way to go about science. The helmets, even with the 4 percent margin of error, still provide invaluable information about how often players get hit during practice and games.

2014 Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy Study

Another example of the NFL’s reluctance to face scientific fact came in 2014, when the league initially agreed to provide $16 million in funding to a study of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). CTE, a degenerative brain disease that can lead to depression, aggression, and dementia, is thought to be caused by repeated subconcussive and concussive blows to the head. As the condition is currently only diagnosed after death, the aim of the study was to see if CTE could be detected in living people.

After the National Institute of Health announced the funding opportunity, NFL-affiliated scientists applied for the funding necessary to conduct the study themselves. The NIH, however, decided to award the money to a group of independent researchers who hypothesized openly that many professional football players were likely living with CTE. The NFL attempted to challenge this decision, but when the NIH wouldn’t budge, they ultimately backed out of funding the research.

Meanwhile, hundreds of professional athletes continue to suffer the effects of repeated head traumas leading to lasting health consequences. As long as NFL researchers continue to deny the connection between high-contact sports and head injuries, and quibble over ways to solve the problem, players will continue to be the ones to suffer for it.

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