Back to All Events

PINK 12 -    World Brain Injury Experts to Debate The Need for "Female-Specific Concussion Protocol” 

  • Convention Centre Dublin DUBLIN IRELAND (map)

PRESS RELEASE - for Embargo until Feb. 3  

 

Debate The Need for "Female-Specific Concussion Protocol” 

 

New York, NY – On March 30, 2023, the international nongovernmental organization, PINK Concussions will host top international brain injury experts in Dublin, Ireland, to debate whether it is time for Female-Specific Concussion Management Protocol in sports.

This ground-breaking 12th PINK Concussions Summit will be held during the IBIA 14th World Congress on Brain Injury, organized in partnership with Acquired Brain Injury Ireland at the Convention Centre Dublin from 4-5:30 PM GMT. 

Founder and Executive Director of PINK Concussions, Katherine Snedaker will moderate this event where top medical experts will debate the changes needed to level the playing field for female athletes.

  1. Should there be "Female-Specific Concussion Management Protocol” in sports?

  2. Should women’s sports teams have to equal access to medical care on the field/pitch as men’s teams? 

  3. Should women's sports teams consider modifications in "rule-specific engagement" based on current concussion research?

“For over a decade, PINK Concussions has been advocating for recognition of sex differences in brain injury mechanisms, symptoms, and recovery trajectories to support practitioners in delivering individualized medical care,” said Katherine Snedaker, LCSW, PINK Concussions, “We believe a debate on a female-focused concussion protocol in sport will highlight the updated medical training needed on sex differences in brain injury. This is essential as brain injury is not identical in women and men.” 

Back in 2012, the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine issued a position statement stating that “in sports with similar rules female athletes sustain more concussions than their male counterparts. In addition, female athletes experience or report a higher number and severity of symptoms as well as a longer duration of recovery than male athletes in several studies." Research over the last decade has continued to support these findings yet there has been no change in the protocol and care for female athletes.

“World-wide research into female concussion continues to support and strengthen the view that females suffer an increased incidence of concussion compared to males in contact sport. Their symptoms also appear to be more persistent and cognitive defecits more pronounced than males,” said Dr. Marshall Garrett MbChB, L/RAMC, MEWI, MIDF, University of Glasgow School of Medicine, “World Sporting bodies need to acknowledge this difference and make provision for female specific assessment and recovery protocols.”

And while this event focuses on women athletes, PINK Concussions believes the impact will also be broad reaching to girls in youth sports as well as women with brain injuries from accidents, domestic violence, and military service.  

Top world experts participating include:

From the UK

  • Willie Stewart MBChB, PhD, DipFMS, FRCPath, FRCP Edin, Queen Elizabeth University Hospital

  • Dr Marshall Garrett MbChB, L/RAMC, MEWI, MIDF, University of Glasgow School of Medicine

From USA

  • Katherine Snedaker, LCSW PINK Concussions

  • Abigail C. Bretzin, PhD, ATC University of Michigan

  • Christopher C. Giza, M.D. Mattel Children’s Hospital, UCLA

  • Christina L. Master, MD, FAAP, CAQSM, FACSM, FAMSSM University of Pennsylvania USA - Perelman School of Medicine, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia 

From Germany

  • Prof. Dr. med. Inga Katharina Koerte Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU), Harvard Medical School (HMS)


For tickets and press passes for this debate only, please fill out this form bit.ly/pinkdebate 

To register for the four day IBIA conference, https://braininjurycongress.org 

For speaker bios and more information https://www.pinkconcussions.org  

Social Media @PINKconcussions @I_B_I_A 

Event hashtag #pinkTBI 

Contact

Katherine Snedaker, Executive Director, PINK Concussions Katherine@PINKconcussions.org

Aoife Lucey, Communications & Engagement Manager, Acquired Brain Injury at Ireland Alucey@abiireland.ie for media queries in Ireland 

###

PINK Concussions is the first international nongovernmental organization to focus on female brain injury including concussions from sport, domestic violence, accidents or military service. Based in the USA, Canada, and the UK, PINK Concussions’ mission is to educate the general public as well as civilian and military medical professionals on the sex and gender differences in female brain injury to improve the pre-injury education and post-injury care/support for women and girls. https://www.pinkconcussions.org

The 14th World Congress on Brain Injury will be held March 29-April 1, 2023, at the Convention Centre Dublin, in Dublin, Ireland. Organized by the International Brain Injury Association (IBIA), the World Congress on Brain Injury is the largest gathering of international professionals working in the field of brain injury. The World Congress is being held in partnership with Acquired Brain Injury Ireland. To register for the conference, see https://braininjurycongress.org