Post-Concussion Care In Amateur Sport Is Barely Discussed, Never Mind Treated

Source: themercury.com.au | Re-Post Duerson Foundation 8/17/2016 – 

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Post-Concussion Care In Amateur Sport Is Barely Discussed, Never Mind Treated

ON the fourth day, Emily Scott began to realise there was something wrong.

With the pain she had been experiencing around her eye after an accidental collision with her training partner at swimming practice subsiding, the budding triathlete thought she would be able to return to training shortly.

Then the headaches and lethargy came.

“I was at the swimming pool and we were doing sprints. I was waiting my turn and the person I was training with kicked off and when they came out to take a breath they accidentally hit me in the face,” she said.

“I got hit just above the eye and around four days later my eye started to get better but I started to get a lot of headaches. I couldn’t get out of bed because I was so tired.
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“I also had a lot of emotional symptoms. I was getting very agitated for no reason, I would need to cry for no reason, I couldn’t ­listen to music or look at lights.”

What happened next can be all too common when it comes to the ­diagnosis and treatment of concussion and post-concussion syndrome below the elite level of sport.

Numerous doctors could not figure out why a 22-year-old recently returned from a training camp in France alongside the best triathletes in the world was now unable to do something as simple as walk to the letterbox and back without having to lie down because of exhaustion.

Scott, also doing honours in just her fourth year as a medical student, spoke to someone about her ­symptoms and they said she might have post-concussion syndrome.

She mentioned it to one doctor who laughed because she had not been knocked out from the initial blow. But after finally finding a GP with some knowledge of mild brain injuries, Scott was diagnosed with post-concussion syndrome.

But it did not end there.

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