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NFL Gives UW $2.5M To Study Concussions

Zackery Lystedt sustained a permanent brain injury as a result of a football concussion he shook off at age 13. That was almost 10 years ago. Today, he's a spokesperson for concussion safety and the inspiration for the new UW institute.
KUOW Photo/Joshua McNichols
Zackery Lystedt sustained a permanent brain injury as a result of a football concussion he said he just shook off at age 13. That was almost 10 years ago. Today, he's a spokesperson for concussion safety and the inspiration for the new UW institute.

Concussions are a big topic in sports these days. This year, the NFL has new rules that will let medical staff stop the game if they think they see a head injury. Now, the National Football League has given $2.5 million so the University of Washington can start up a new institute to study concussions.

TRANSCRIPT:

Zackery Lystedt had a concussion while playing football at age 13, almost 10 years ago. He ignored the injury and kept playing. That left him with a permanent brain injury.

Today, he advises young athletes not to make that same mistake.

Lystedt: “If they don’t take the time to heal the concussion something very catastrophic could happen.”

But Lystedt still loves football.

[asset-images[{"caption": "Should parents let their kids play football? Zackery Lystedt's mom, Mercedes Lystedt, emphatically says yes.", "fid": "119871", "style": "placed_left", "uri": "public://201508/mercedes_lystedt.jpg", "attribution": "Credit KUOW Photo/Joshua McNichols"}]]NFL official Jeff Miller says to not let concussions scare us away from football.

Miller: “Well, there’s risk in everything. Football’s a contact sport; many sports are. And players are going to get injured from time to time. The real question is what is the value of participation in that sport verses the risks associated with it?”

The institute is partly about studying concussions, but it’s also about advocacy. And figuring out how to get teams to play sports more safely.

[asset-images[{"caption": "NFL safety expert Jeff Miller", "fid": "119877", "style": "placed_wide", "uri": "public://201508/jeff_smith.jpg", "attribution": "Credit KUOW Photo/Joshua McNichols"}]][asset-audio[{"description": "KUOW asks the NFL's Jeff Miller how the league will respond differently to concussions this year. Last season, some analysts believe a Patriot played through a concussion in the Superbowl match against the Seahawks.", "fid": "119874", "uri": "npraudio://201508/20150812_JM_NFL.mp3"}]][asset-audio[{"description": "KUOW asks NFL's Jeff Miller if $2.5M is enough, given the magnitude of the liability it faces from concussion-related injuries", "fid": "119879", "uri": "public://201508/20150813_JM_NFL2.mp3"}]]Richard Ellenbogen will help lead the institute. He says his job is not to promote football.

Ellenbogen: “If this were just about football, I wouldn’t do it. It’s got to be about soccer and rugby and equestrian.”

... And just falling down and hitting your head. As for the $2.5 million from the NFL, Ellenbogen says that’s just seed money. He wants to raise about $10 million more from private donations.  

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Correction, 9:30 a.m., 8/14/2015: In previous versions of this story, an incorrect name was given for NFL official Jeff Miller.