States Seek to Ensure Student-Athlete Safety in High Heat

July 26 marks the one-year anniversary of what Douglas Casa, a leading expert on exertional heat illness, called "the worst week in the last 35 years in terms of athlete deaths."

July 26 marks the one-year anniversary of what Douglas Casa, a leading expert on exertional heat illness, called "the worst week in the last 35 years in terms of athlete deaths." Temperatures approaching or surpassing triple digits were blamed for five heat-related high school football deaths in an eight-day span from July 26 to Aug. 2, 2011: A 16-year-old senior in Florida collapsed during a workout and died on July 26; the same thing happened to a 14-year-old freshman in South Carolina four days later. A 55-year-old assistant coach in Texas died on Aug. 1, and two players from Georgia succumbed to the heat on Aug. 2. (Additionally, four Arkansas players were hospitalized on Aug. 3 as the thermometer peaked at 114 degrees.)

Today, almost 12 months later, Casa - a physician and chief operating officer of the University of Connecticut's Korey Stringer Institute, as well as author of the book Preventing Sudden Death in Sports and Physical Activity - is much more upbeat. "These past 11 months have probably been the most important 11 months we have ever had in terms of changing policy in our country," he says.

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