Home
|
YooskTV
|
Members
|
Public Figures
|
Features
|
Search
|
Journalists
|
Site Guide - FAQs
|
I'd like to ask
569 people in 214 cities are asking questions to 1,049 people
Login
Username
Password
Remember me
Forgot your password?
Question
Question
Vivienne Nathanson
, Recent media reports highlight both childhood obesity and growing disinterest in sports among teenage girls as major health concerns. Given that there is no real evidence to show that amateur boxing can cause long term health problems, if children are interested in taking this up as a sport wouldn’t the advantages of being active outweigh the disadvantages of minor injuries?
Asked by
shakeel8
on Nov 14 2007 10:26:02 AM
and supported by 37 members
37
Answer
Obesity is an increasingly significant problem in the UK and efforts should be made to encourage interest in sport and being active. But boxing has its own significant risks to health, and as such concerted effort should go into advertising and raising participation in other sports, where inflicting pain and injury is not the objective. Although there is less evidence of long-term health problems in amateur boxing, that does not mean there is no risk. Evidence suggests that like their professional counterparts, amateur boxers are affected by chronic brain injury, albeit to a lesser extent. The use of headgear in amateur boxing is often promotes as preventing brain injury, when in fact it only prevents superficial head damage. This could mean that boxers receive more damage to their brain than they would otherwise, for example a fight continuing to knockout, which may have been stopped earlier due to other superficial head injuries. There is also the possibility that head guards could increase the injury by presenting more angled edges to blows which then produce the classical boxing rotational acceleration effect. The only way to prevent brain damage in boxing is to either ban boxing entirely or ban blows to the head.
MORE!
Comment
Topics you are talking about:
All Topics
Politics
World Affairs
Local Issues
Sport
Science and Technology
Business
Crime
Environment
Arts and entertainment
Media
People you are asking:
Lynne Featherstone
Barack Obama
Alistair Darling
David Miliband
david milliband
Gordon Brown
James Purnell
Gerry Adams
Ian Levitt
Brian Barwick
Jeff Winter
Banksy
Adam Crozier
Jeremy Hunt
Hazel Blears
Blog
|
Contact Us
|
Answering on Yoosk
|
Start your own Yoosk
|
Advertisers
|
About Us
|
Terms of Service
|
Privacy Policy
|
Widget