Skip directly to search Skip directly to A to Z list Skip directly to navigation Skip directly to page options Skip directly to site content

HEADS UP to High School Sports: Officials

Sports are a great way for children and teens to stay healthy and can help them do well in school. As a high school official, your actions help set the tone for safe play and can help lower an athlete’s chances of getting a concussion or other serious injury. Learn more about concussion in high school sports, how you can create a culture of safety at a game or competition, and more.

Fact Sheet for High School Sports Officials

	thumbnail image of PDFInformation to help you protect athletes from concussion or other serious brain injury, learn how to spot a concussion, and know what to do if a concussion occurs..

Download
Additional Versions

Fact Sheets for Youth Sports Officials

	Watch for possible concussions. Use injury timeouts to ensure that an athlete with a possible concussion is removed from play. When in doubt, sit them out! Enforce the rule than an athlete with a possible concussion cannot return to play on the same day of the injury and until seen and cleared by a health care provider.

	As many as 25% of the concussions reported among high school athletes result from aggressive or illegal play activity. Enforce safe play. You set the tone for safety.

HEADS UP to Youth Sports

	HEADS UP Coaches - Concussion in Youth Sports

For information on concussion in youth sports, see HEADS UP Concussion in Youth Sports.

More

References

  1. Collins CL, Fields SK, Comstock RD. When the rules of the game are broken: What proportion of high school sports-related injuries are related to illegal activity? Inj Prev. 2008 Feb;14(1):34-8.
Top