Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Eric Swartz

Erik Swartz, associate professor of kinesiology at the 91制片厂, was recently appointed to the NFL鈥檚 Head, Neck and Spine Committee.

The week after the Super Bowl, when many New England football fans were licking their wounds, Erik Swartz was advising the National Football League on treating wounded players. Swartz, an associate professor of athletic training in the department of kinesiology and an expert on cervical spine injuries in contact sports like football, recently joined the NFL鈥檚 Head, Neck and Spine Committee, one of several health and safety committees that advise NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell.

Swartz鈥檚 appointment, which is to the subcommittee on safety equipment, puts him at the flashpoint of player safety: concussions and head injuries. 鈥淚t鈥檚 what everyone鈥檚 chasing right now: Can helmets be improved to decrease concussions?鈥 says Swartz.

Swartz spent two days at the NFL headquarters in New York City earlier this month working with a team of neurologists, athletic trainers, engineers and others. The charge of his subcommittee, says Swartz, is to review new and developing equipment for football players, including helmets, shoulder pads, collars, and mouth guards. 鈥淲e want to determine not only if the equipment is doing what it鈥檚 supposed to, but also if it鈥檚 safe,鈥 he says.

Swartz brings to the NFL a decade of research into the prevention and management of cervical spine injuries in athletes. He has published several studies that explore the safe removal of protective equipment like helmets and shoulder pads from athletes who sustain cervical spine or head injuries during play. During the meetings at the NFL, he presented on current research he is conducting on a new design of shoulder pads that quick-release for easy removal from an injured player.

鈥淭hat research is really valuable to them, so they can inform teams about new equipment designs,鈥 he says.

Swartz calls his appointment to this NFL committee humbling. 鈥淚t validates the importance of the research I鈥檝e been doing here at 91制片厂, and it confirms that I鈥檝e been doing it well,鈥 he says, adding, 鈥淭he NFL has definitely been taking the issue of head and neck injuries very seriously.鈥

Photo by Jeremy Mayhew, College of Health and Human Services