Bill Text: CA AB2127 | 2013-2014 | Regular Session | Chaptered


Bill Title: Interscholastic sports: full-contact football practices: concussions and head injuries.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Passed) 2014-07-21 - Chaptered by Secretary of State - Chapter 165, Statutes of 2014. [AB2127 Detail]

Download: California-2013-AB2127-Chaptered.html
BILL NUMBER: AB 2127	CHAPTERED
	BILL TEXT

	CHAPTER  165
	FILED WITH SECRETARY OF STATE  JULY 21, 2014
	APPROVED BY GOVERNOR  JULY 21, 2014
	PASSED THE SENATE  JUNE 19, 2014
	PASSED THE ASSEMBLY  MAY 15, 2014
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  MAY 1, 2014
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  APRIL 1, 2014

INTRODUCED BY   Assembly Member Cooley

                        FEBRUARY 20, 2014

   An act to amend Section 49475 of, and to add Section 35179.5 to,
the Education Code, relating to interscholastic sports.


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 2127, Cooley. Interscholastic sports: full-contact football
practices: concussions and head injuries.
   (1) Existing law establishes a system of public elementary and
secondary schools operated by local educational agencies throughout
this state. Under existing law, public and private secondary schools
participate in interscholastic sports, and are authorized to enter
into associations or consortia to enact and enforce rules relating to
eligibility for, and participation in, these activities. Existing
law acknowledges the role of the California Interscholastic
Federation in the regulation of interscholastic sports in this state.

   This bill would express legislative findings and declarations
relating to head injuries sustained by high school pupil-athletes,
particularly those who play football. The bill would prohibit high
school and middle school football teams of school districts, charter
schools, or private schools that elect to offer an athletic program
from conducting more than 2 full-contact practices, as defined, per
week during the preseason and regular season, as defined. The bill
would also prohibit the full-contact portion of a practice from
exceeding 90 minutes in any single day, and completely prohibit
full-contact practice during the off-season, as defined. The bill
would urge the California Interscholastic Federation to develop and
adopt rules to implement this provision.
   The bill would provide that these provisions do not prohibit the
California Interscholastic Federation, an interscholastic athletic
league, a school, a school district, or any other appropriate entity
from adopting and enforcing rules intended to provide a higher
standard of safety for athletes than the standard established under
the bill.
   (2) Existing law requires a school district, charter school, or
private school, if it offers an athletic program, to immediately
remove an athlete from an athletic activity for the remainder of the
day if the athlete is suspected of sustaining a concussion or head
injury, and prohibits the athlete from returning to the athletic
activity until the athlete is evaluated by a licensed health care
provider, trained in the management of concussions and acting within
the scope of his or her practice, and the athlete receives written
clearance from the licensed health care provider to return to the
athletic activity. Existing law also requires, on a yearly basis, a
concussion and head injury information sheet to be signed and
returned by the athlete and athlete's parent or guardian before the
athlete initiates practice or competition.
   This bill would provide that an athlete suspected of sustaining a
concussion or head injury is prohibited from returning to the
athletic activity until the athlete is evaluated by a licensed health
care provider, as defined to mean a licensed health care provider
trained in the management of concussions and acting within the scope
of his or her practice, and the athlete receives written clearance
from a licensed health care provider. The bill would further provide
that, if a licensed health care provider determines that the athlete
sustained a concussion or a head injury, the athlete is required to
complete a graduated return-to-play protocol of no less than 7 days
in duration under the supervision of a licensed health care provider.
The bill would urge the California Interscholastic Federation to
develop and adopt rules and protocols to implement this provision.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  The Legislature finds and declares all of the
following:
   (a) Concussions and other mild traumatic brain injuries affect
thousands of California's high school pupil-athletes each year. Many
concussions or head injuries go undetected due to a lack of
recognition of symptoms or intentional underreporting of symptoms.
   (b) Most concussions do not involve a loss of consciousness,
according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
   (c) The symptoms of concussions vary, and most symptoms are not
necessarily specific to concussion. Symptoms may include dizziness,
sensitivity to light, and loss of consciousness.
   (d) Pupil-athletes who suffer a concussion are more likely to
suffer an additional concussion than someone who has never been
concussed.
   (e) Children and adolescents are skeletally immature, and are thus
more likely to be concussed or suffer a brain injury than adults.
   (f) Many athletes want to keep playing despite a concussion or
head injury. In a study published by the American Academy of
Pediatrics in October 2012, 32 percent of high school football
players reported that they had experienced symptoms of concussion but
did not pursue medical attention.
   (g) Many high schools lack the standard of care afforded to
college and professional players. At the collegiate and professional
level, neurologists and other physicians are available. High schools
cannot afford this. In California, coaches or athletic trainers are
required to remove any player from practice or competition if that
player is exhibiting signs or symptoms of a concussion or head
injury.
   (h) Medical experts recommend that the recovery and rehabilitation
process from a concussion proceed conservatively. Experts suggest
that the recovery and rehabilitation process should have six stages,
which should be supervised and should last at least 24 hours each,
and that athletes should be prohibited from proceeding until they are
asymptomatic. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics,
adolescents suffer from post-concussive symptoms longer than adults
or college students.
   (i) Researchers agree that there is no way to "condition" the
brain for hits to the head. Researchers strongly contend that hits to
the brain should be minimized as much as possible.
   (j) Several academic and scientific studies have asserted that the
cumulative effects of sub-concussive blows to the brain due to
football may contribute to long-term brain damage and early-onset
dementia, including chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).
   (k) A Boston University study in 2012 studied the brains of 85
deceased athletes and military veterans with histories of repeated
mild traumatic brain injuries. Eighty percent of those studied had
CTE. Six of the deceased were football players who had not played
past high school.
   (l) In 2010, a 21-year-old University of Pennsylvania football
player committed suicide. After a subsequent brain study, he was
found to have early stages of CTE. The athlete had never been
diagnosed with a concussion, and had never even complained of a
headache. Doctors contend that his CTE must have developed from
concussions he dismissed or from the thousands of sub-concussive
collisions he endured while playing football, most of which occurred
while his brain was still developing.
   (m) Nineteen states have banned off-season full-contact high
school football practices. California allows each of its 10 sections
to make its own determination. Several of those sections still allow
full-contact summer and spring practices.
   (n) Several states have limited full-contact practices during the
preseason and regular season.
   (o) Maryland and Connecticut require that a supervised
return-to-play protocol be followed in the event of a concussion or
head injury.
  SEC. 2.  Section 35179.5 is added to the Education Code, to read:
   35179.5.  (a) (1) If a school district, charter school, or private
school elects to offer an athletic program, it shall comply with all
of the following:
   (A) A high school or middle school football team shall not conduct
more than two full-contact practices per week during the preseason
and regular season.
    (B) The full-contact portion of a practice shall not exceed 90
minutes in any single day.
   (C) A high school or middle school football team shall not hold a
full-contact practice during the off-season.
   (2) For purposes of this section, a team camp session shall be
deemed to be a practice.
   (b) The California Interscholastic Federation is urged to develop
and adopt rules to implement this section.
   (c) As used in this section:
   (1) "Full-contact practice" means a practice where drills or live
action is conducted that involves collisions at game speed, where
players execute tackles and other activity that is typical of an
actual tackle football game.
   (2) "Off-season" means a period extending from the end of the
regular season until 30 days before the commencement of the next
regular season.
   (3) "Preseason" means a period of 30 days before the commencement
of the regular season.
   (4) "Regular season" means the period from the first
interscholastic football game or scrimmage until the completion of
the final interscholastic football game of that season.
   (d) This section shall not prohibit the California Interscholastic
Federation, an interscholastic athletic league, a school, a school
district, or any other appropriate entity from adopting and enforcing
rules intended to provide a higher standard of safety for athletes
than the standard established under this section.
  SEC. 3.  Section 49475 of the Education Code is amended to read:
   49475.  (a) If a school district, charter school, or private
school elects to offer an athletic program, the school district,
charter school, or private school shall comply with both of the
following:
   (1) An athlete who is suspected of sustaining a concussion or head
injury in an athletic activity shall be immediately removed from the
athletic activity for the remainder of the day, and shall not be
permitted to return to the athletic activity until he or she is
evaluated by a licensed health care provider. The athlete shall not
be permitted to return to the athletic activity until he or she
receives written clearance to return to the athletic activity from a
licensed health care provider. If the licensed health care provider
determines that the athlete sustained a concussion or a head injury,
the athlete shall also complete a graduated return-to-play protocol
of no less than seven days in duration under the supervision of a
licensed health care provider. The California Interscholastic
Federation is urged to work in consultation with the American Academy
of Pediatrics and the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine
to develop and adopt rules and protocols to implement this paragraph.

   (2) On a yearly basis, a concussion and head injury information
sheet shall be signed and returned by the athlete and the athlete's
parent or guardian before the athlete initiates practice or
competition.
   (b) As used in this section, "licensed health care provider" means
a licensed health care provider who is trained in the management of
concussions and is acting within the scope of his or her practice.
   (c) This section does not apply to an athlete engaging in an
athletic activity during the regular schoolday or as part of a
physical education course required pursuant to subdivision (d) of
Section 51220.                                          
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