Safety net
Bryce Alderton
In a move to increase player safety, Newport Harbor is making
leaps.
In July, Newport Harbor football players on all levels took tests
on computers that assessed their memory skills.
Douglas Harrington, a Newport Beach neuropsychologist specializing
in injuries to the brain, administered the tests over two days in
late July as players wrapped up summer conditioning.
Harrington approached Newport Harbor Athletic Director Eric Tweit,
who then referred Harrington to Brinkley last spring.
“He explained the program and it seems like a real beneficial
program to me,” Brinkley said.
Harrington uses ImPact 2.0, a Microsoft Windows-based program that
can be administered by an athletic trainer, coach or physician, that
measures cognitive activity such as word discrimination, design
memory and visual attention span among other brain functions.
Each player received a baseline score specific to them when they
took the test in July. If they suffer a concussion in a game or
practice, they would retake the same tests to determine if they
returned to their baseline level.
Harrington, Newport Harbor Team Physician Alex Tischler and
Athletic Trainer Brian Melstrom would then meet to assess the scores
and the team or family physician would make the final decision
whether a player could return to play.
“I hope this sort of evaluation can reduce the likelihood of a
tragic thing like that from happening again,” said Harrington,
referring to the death of Costa Mesa High football player Matthew
Colby last September after Colby took himself out of a Sept. 28 game
against Westminster.
An autopsy revealed Colby died from two brain injuries that caused
bleeding and swelling of the brain.
“This will prevent an athlete from going back to a competitive
situation where (he or she) might have another concussion upon an
already existing concussion,” said Harrington, speaking of
second-impact syndrome, which occurs when an athlete suffers a head
injury and is hit in the head again before the injury has completely
healed.
“The brain can catastrophically go into a spasm and cause severe
injury if not death,” Harrington said.
Newport Harbor is the first Orange County high school to use the
program, according to Harrington, but the tests are being used by
about 150 high school in the Northeastern United States.
Professional teams in the NHL and NFL as well as Division I
college teams currently use the program as it slowly filters its way
into the high schools.
Harrington is the neuropsychology consultant to the Anaheim Mighty
Ducks, who have also been tested.
“It would not surprise me to see more schools do this assessment
over the next few years with other sports as well,” said Harrington,
a 20-year Newport Beach resident who received his Ph.D. from the
University of Southern California and has had two daughters graduate
from Newport Harbor and a son who will enter as a freshman this year.
Tischler and Melstrom will meet next week with Harrington to
discuss how to evaluate scores should a player suffer a concussion,
determining the proper medical procedure to follow for a player’s
subsequent return, Brinkley said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.