July 26 (Reuters) – Researchers have found “conclusive evidence” that repeated head impacts cause chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a new study showed, and they called on sports governing bodies to take measures to help prevent the degenerative brain disease.
The study was carried out by researchers from Harvard University and eight other academic institutions alongside the Concussion Legacy Foundation, a Boston-based nonprofit which aims to reduce the risk of concussions in young athletes.
Dr Chris Nowinski, chief executive of the Foundation and a lead author of the study, said website on Tuesday the analysis provided “the highest scientific confidence” of a causal body link between repeated head impacts and CTE.
“Sport governing bodies should acknowledge that head impacts cause CTE and they should not mislead the public on CTE causation while athletes die, and families are destroyed, by this terrible disease,” Nowinski added.
The research paper, titled Applying the Bradford Hill Criteria for Causation to Repetitive Head Impacts and Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, was published website in the Frontiers in Neurology journal last week.
Researchers have asked sports bodies, government officials and parents to implement prevention and mitigation efforts, especially for children.
“This analysis shows it is time to include repetitive head impacts and CTE among child protection efforts like exposure to lead, mercury, smoking, and sunburns,” said Dr Adam Finkel, a co-author of the study and a professor at the University of Michigan.
“Repetitive head impacts and CTE deserve recognition in the global public health discussion of preventable disorders caused by childhood exposures.”
On Monday, lawyers for a group of former rugby players issued formal legal proceedings against the sport’s governing bodies over claims that the failure to protect them led to the early onset of dementia.
England’s Football Association will trial a ban on heading by soccer players across the under-12 level from the 2022-23 season. (Reporting by Hritika Sharma in Hyderabad; Editing by Hugh Lawson)