Dementia and football: Brain injury study to begin in January
Last updated on .From the section Football
A long-awaited study into the links between heading a football and brain damage will start in January, the Football Association has announced.
The doctor who claimed former striker Jeff Astle died because of repeated head trauma is to lead the study.
Dr Willie Stewart said his report would aim to "provide some understanding of the long-term health impact of football within the next two to three years".
"This is a huge day for football," said former England captain Alan Shearer.
In the recent BBC documentary Alan Shearer: Dementia, Football and Me, the ex-Newcastle United striker highlighted the case of Astle.
A former England international, Astle developed dementia and died in 2002 at the age of 59.
The inquest into his death found repeatedly heading heavy leather footballs had contributed to trauma to his brain.
After the inquest, research was commissioned by the FA and the Professional Footballers' Association (PFA) but it was later dropped because of what were said to be technical flaws.
Astle's family has campaigned for the football authorities to launch a comprehensive research programme.
His daughter Dawn said she was "relieved" the study was now going ahead.
"I hope we can get some closure," she told BBC Sport.
"I am still angry and upset. It will be 2018 when the study starts, it's 16 lost and wasted years, and in the meantime players are dying."
Dr Stewart was appointed by the FA and PFA, who had invited applications for independent research in March.
His study will be titled 'Football's Influence on Lifelong Health and Dementia Risk'.
Dr Stewart said: "In the past decade there have been growing concerns around perceived increased risk of dementia through participation in contact sports, however, research data to support and quantify this risk have been lacking."
PFA chief executive Gordon Taylor added: "Neurological problems in later life which may be connected to concussion, head injuries and heading the ball have been on our agenda for the last 20 years."
Shearer told BBC Sport: "When you consider what the coroner said in 2002, and nothing has been done until now, then it is a big day.
"It has been a long time coming and I am delighted the FA and PFA have have now backed it and we can now get the answer that football needs."
FA chief executive Martin Glenn said the new research "will be one the most comprehensive studies ever commissioned into the long-term health of former footballers".
He added: "Dementia can have a devastating effect and, as the governing body of English football, we felt compelled to commission a significant new study in order to fully understand if there are any potential risks associated with playing the game."
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The spec for the balls weight 14-16 oz hasn't changed for over 8 decades. The material used has changed many times during the period. Prior to the 70's the ball was different in wet conditions but they were not as heavy as what people today think were.
Most people I talk to will tell you Jeff died as a result of an industrial injury. Others who were less well known may have suffered also.
A more interesting point is raised in comment 1, about the weight of old footballs compared to modern ones. It is highly likely that in Astle's era you could get brain damage from heading; maybe today's players are not at such risk.
Unfortunately, as Professor Tim Noakes and Sir Steve Redgrave found to their cost, the overemphasis of this macronutrient has detrimental effects.
As Dr. Kraft hypothesised, insulin-resistance is rife in our society.
They literally exploit the idea that Alan Shearer might have brain damage and that they might show his diagnosis on camera.
Like the whole show is based on whether we're going to find out Alan Shearer will get alzheimers and dementia.
Poor taste. Surely you don't have to plumb this low to catch our attention BBC!
Wait 'til the cheeky little bu ggers wake up on Christmas morning & find no eggs under the bonfire.