Editor’s Note: On Jan. 29, a lengthy article dealing with the increasing evidence of brain injuries caused by blows to the head in football and other sports was published in the Eau Claire Leader-Telegram. That report, produced by the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism (WCIJ) and written by Luke Schaetzel, looked at this topic through the lens of current and former University of Wisconsin football players and the research of Dr. Bennet Omalu, the forensic pathologist whose discovery of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) was featured in the 2015 movie “Concussion.”
The WCIJ also made available at the same time a sidebar interview with Omalu, which was not included in the Leader-Telegram’s coverage. In that interview, Omalu spoke with Schaetzel about the dangers of all high contact sports and subconcussive hits that damage the brain.
In keeping with our goal of providing in-depth coverage that doesn’t appear in other Chippewa Valley media, the WCIJ interview with Omalu is reprinted here. Readers who want to see the main WCIJ article can find it at http://www.leadertelegram.com/News/Front-Page/2018/01/28/div-class-libPageBodyLinebreak-More-than-nbsp-br-a-nbsp-little-dazed-div.html.
Home page photo: University of Wisconsin running backs coach John Settle talks with players during the Badgers’ game against Iowa on Nov. 11, 2017. Settle says he hopes better helmets can reduce concussions in football. UW-Madison is at the center of the national concussion debate, with two ongoing studies focusing on concussions in students and student athletes. (Photo by Brad Horn, for the WCIJ)
By Luke Schaetzel, Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism
The subject of the 2015 movie “Concussion,” Dr. Bennet Omalu’s discovery of a degenerative brain disease in former Pittsburgh Steelers (and University of Wisconsin) center Mike Webster and others has spurred a national debate about the safety of high contact sports including football, ice hockey, mixed martial arts, boxing, wrestling, rugby, lacrosse and soccer.
In 2002, Omalu identified chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a crippling neurodegenerative disease found in Webster and other football players. Webster went from Hall of Fame inductee and Super Bowl champion to homeless. His erratic behavior included tasing himself into unconsciousness in order to sleep.
Omalu likens the American obsession with football to a religion. In that regard, he might be considered a heretic: Omalu has equated allowing children to play football to child abuse and warns that the NFL is doomed unless it starts reducing harmful blows to the head.
Excerpts from Omalu Interview
Below are excerpts of a WCIJ interview with Omalu:
Several players on the University of Wisconsin football team have described not having had concussions in years, but having their “bell rung” many times. They’re quoted as feeling dazed and slightly disoriented. Are these concussions? Are these hits dangerous?
“Bell ringing is a concussion. And you don’t need to suffer a concussion to suffer brain damage. The issue here is repeated blows to the head, with or without concussion.
“I know someone personally who played in the NFL. Several years ago I called him and he told me, ‘Hey this doesn’t affect everybody, I play safe!’ Now he can’t even keep a job, every job he gets, he gets fired because his mind is not just right, he doesn’t remember things. And he is calling me now asking me how I can help him. How am I going to help you? I was helping you several years ago when I advised you to stop playing …
“If you’re above 18 and you want to drink alcohol, smoke marijuana or play a dangerous sport, that’s your discretion. There is nothing anybody can do about it…. When young adults want to play football and are damaging their brains; good for you. There is nothing I can do about it. My focus is on children under the age of consent. They should not be engaging in dangerous activities that could be damaging their brains.”
You mentioned how subconcussive hits are the real problem. How exactly do subconcussive hits end up negatively affecting the brain?
“The human brain is 60 to 80 percent water. The human brain floats freely inside your skull, and the human brain has no reasonable capacity to cure itself, so when you have a blow to your head, there is no regeneration. In the game of football, some of these blows to the head are equivalent to a car crash at 13 miles per hour.
“The human brain does not have a capacity to sustain such violence, so each and every impact you have causes microscopic injuries in your brain. … And it’s final, there is no cure, and it is progressive. So subconcussive blows are accumulated upon each other. There is no safe blow to the human head. Every impact to your head can be dangerous. That is why you need to protect your head from all types of blunt force trauma. A helmet does not make a difference.”
What kind of an issue is the issue of concussion?
“Many of these kids have been raised in cultures where football is elevated to a level of religion. So their thinking of football is not objective, it is emotional, it’s a habit….
“Majority of football players, high school, college, NFL are black. In the NFL for instance, blacks make up about 10 to 12 percent of the total population but make up about 75 percent of professional football players. So this is becoming a civil rights issue. It is a certain segment of the population that is more likely to be underprivileged. They are being guided by a certain cultural mindset.
“There is a false narrative being presented to poor black kids in the South, that is not true, that football almost guarantees they’ll move up the economic ladder. That is a lie. That is a complete lie. Who is more likely to live in a million dollar home when they are they are 60 years old: a dentist, a physician, a lawyer or a professional football player? Poor black kids believe that playing football will buy them the million dollar home when they are 60 years old. We are feeding this false narrative to children ….
“I think this is the civil rights issue of our time, or one of the major civil rights issue of our time. Children from higher socioeconomic families, children of doctors, lawyers, engineers; you are less likely to find them on the field of football.”
The NCAA and U.S. Department of Defense are conducting a $30 million concussion study. Would you trust medical research coming from the NCAA directly?
“The NCAA is not in the business to do medical research. That’s not what they do. The medical research they do, I wouldn’t trust it. So when the NFL was involved with medical research, the NFL’s conclusion was that football did not cause brain damage ….
“So the NCAA should not be involved with medical research, if they have the money, they should give the money to independent researchers. Medicine is not an absolute science. Medicine is not like math or physics. In medicine you can cook the books and come up with the results you want to come up with.
“When these doctors make public statements you see, their statement is normally that they can make football safer. … They say they can make it safer, they can’t make it safe.”
What is the long term outlook on the sport, in your view?
“There is only one truth, truth does not have a side or different perspectives …. And if you choose to ignore that one truth and come up with your own alternative truth, you can only ever get to darkness, you can never get to the light of truth.
“So the sooner we work on seeing the truth for what it is, the better for football, the better for all of us. If football chooses to deny the truth, the long-term sustainability of football as an industry will be in doubt.
“Someone like me who speaks the truth about football is actually a better asset to football than a doctor who denies that football does not cause brain damage, in the long term.”
The nonprofit Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism (www.WisconsinWatch.org) collaborates with Wisconsin Public Radio, Wisconsin Public Television, other news media and the UW-Madison School of Journalism and Mass Communication. All works created, published, posted or disseminated by the Center do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of UW-Madison or any of its affiliates.