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Jennifer
Botterill couldn't drive a
car without getting a
headache. Bright lights and
loud sounds made the
symptoms worse.
Physical exercise was out of
the question.
The two-time
Olympic gold medallist and
member of Canada's women's
national hockey team was
suffering from the worst
concussion of her career,
one that kept her off the
ice for four months.
The cause: a full speed
collision with another
player at practice.
"It's one of
the toughest injuries to
deal with, because honestly,
you just have to be so
patient," says the Winnipeg
native, a fixture on the
national team for the past
decade. |
"Other injuries, you can be active and
do active rehabilitation. All I
could do was rest."
According to recent findings, Botterill
is far from alone. A study of NCAA
sports found women playing hockey were
more than twice as likely as their male
counterparts to suffer concussions.
The female game even topped football in
concussion numbers, according to the
study.
"The honest answer is yes, this is a
surprise," says Dr. Michael Czarnota,
neuropsychology consultant for the
Canadian Hockey League. "There's
no fighting in women's hockey, there's
no intentional checking. What's
left? It's the unintentional
collisions, or catching an edge,
stepping on a puck or something like
that. You take out the two largest
contributors to bodily force, fighting
and checking, and you still end up with
rates that are equal to or higher than
men's hockey.
"Why it happens, I think, is just
supposition at this point."
Botterill brings up one of the popular
theories: there may be more reporting in
the women's game. She says this after
watching her brother Jason's pro hockey
career cut short because of too many
concussions.
"Obviously our game is still physical,
but I don't think quite to the extent of
men's hockey," she says. "For the men's
game, in terms of their contracts,
sitting out, that's pretty significant
for them."
Women may be more susceptible to brain
injuries, men might have stronger neck
muscles to protect against the injury -
these are other popular theories to
explain why numbers may be greater in
the women's game.
But as Czarnota notes, they're all
theories at this point. More
research is necessary.
"It's unknown; it's people pulling
straws," he says.
He questions the NCAA study, because it
looked at 15 varsity sports from
1988-2004, but women's hockey injuries
were recorded only starting in 2000, so
there's less data to draw from.
Czarnota also pointed to another study
that looked at concussion rates in the
East Coast Athletic Conference over the
course of a year, where men's concussion
rates outnumbered women's.
"It's hard to know how stable that
really is, how accurate it is," he says.
What doctors do know for certain is that
concussions — causes, symptoms and
treatment — are different for everyone.
"We can't apply adult expectations to
high school athletes, and now we're
discovering we may not be able to extend
research from men's sports to women's,"
Czarnota says. "There has been
some research to show that girls might
take a little bit longer to recover than
boys. To me it just reinforces the
fact that we can't use a
one-size-fits-all treatment approach.
Everybody's going to recover
differently."
Kim McCullough got her first bad
concussion in her rookie year with
Dartmouth College's women's hockey team.
She scored four points that game, but
doesn't remember anything that happened
after she took a hit to the chin in
front of the net. Symptoms set in
on the bus ride home.
Now a coach and trainer she works
with women's teams from novice to
national, McCullough contends the
"alarmingly high" concussion rate in the
women's game is a result of a lack of
strength training and the fact that
girls are never taught to take a hit.
"It makes sense from a coach and parent
perspective, you think because there's
no body checking, why would you teach
somebody to take a hit?" she says.
"But girls are getting hit all the time.
It's the most awkward type of hit,
hitting your own teammate, or the
awkward falls. That's what's
causing this higher concussion rate."
Whatever the cause, Czarnota says when
he sits down with parents, coaches and
players to talk about concussions, he
explains "this is part of the game."
"You can wear a cage like they do in
college hockey, and you're still going
to have concussions. You can take
fighting out of the game like they do in
college hockey, and you're still going
to have concussions. You can take
checking out of the game like they do in
women's hockey, and you're still going
to have concussions.
"There is a risk that these kind of
injuries can and do happen."
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