Board debates concussion policy wording; some directors press for physician-level clearance

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Summary

Directors discussed proposed concussion-management language during first reading of policy updates. One board member said only a neurologist or neurosurgeon should clear students to return to play; others said licensed physicians and trained clinicians are acceptable and that practical access and return-to-play safeguards matter.

Board members debated concussion-management language during the policy first read at the Sept. 4 work session, with disagreement over which medical professionals should clear student-athletes to return to participation.

Board member Bill said he would vote against the policy unless a neurologist or neurosurgeon signs return-to-play clearances, citing concern about subtle, repeated brain injuries. Other directors pointed to the policy language that allows a “licensed physician trained in evaluation and management of concussions” and qualified neuropsychological evaluators, and noted that access to specialists can cause delays.

A district presenter said the policy requires written clearance by an appropriate medical professional before a student returns to participation and that multiple levels of trained clinicians are standard practice to ensure timely evaluation. A speaker who works in health services said the current structure typically uses tiered providers so students can be seen quickly and then referred to higher-level specialists when needed.

No formal vote was recorded at the work session; the policy remains at first read. Directors asked administration to consider clarifying language and to balance clinical expertise with practical access to care for timely student evaluation.