Kansas City,
02
October
2019
|
10:59 AM
America/Chicago

Fox 4: New study finds girls more likely to delay concussion treatment, face longer recovery

By Kera Mashek

One in five teens say they've had at least one concussion, and a new study finds young girls might be waiting too long to get treatment.

Ashley Williams makes tumbling passes look easy. She loves cheerleading, especially high-level competition.

But right now, she's not cheering on the sidelines or training to compete. During a high school cheer practice last month, she was dropped from the air, her head hitting the ground.

"I immediately felt off. The lights were hurting my eyes. I felt nauseous. My head was hurting," she said.

The diagnosis: a concussion.

"It really is important for parents to know what's going on, the athlete to know what's going on, to recognize signs and symptoms," said Dr. Brian Harvey, a pediatric sports medicine physician with Children's Mercy.

"If you get into a clinic within seven days, your symptoms typically don't last as long," Harvey said. "So it's really important once you get that head or neck injury that you have symptoms associated with it, to get pulled out and get evaluated by your physician or a sports medicine doctor so your symptoms potentially won't last as long."

Thankfully, that's just what Ashley did.

The team at Children's Mercy Sports Medicine Center in KCK have been helping her regain balance, sharpen control, vision, and honing her skills, with the goal of being competition ready by spring.

"It's been amazing. I feel like I'd not be nearly as far along with my progress of getting better without this," Williams said.

Doctors say continuing to improve concussion awareness and education, and making sure head injuries are spotted fast in both male and female athletes, is key to helping all students like Ashley get back to normal including to the sports they love.

 

See the full story via Fox 4

Learn more about the Sports Medicine Center at Children's Mercy