The Westside Gazette

NFL culture shift on full display after Hamlin collapse

Photo illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios. Photo: Dylan Buell/Getty Images

By Jeff Tracy and Tina Reed

(Source Axios):

Americans saw pro football players weep openly on the field and during news conferences last week — a window into a deep culture shift by one of the nation’s most macho and barbaric sports.

Why it matters: The reaction of NFL players and coaches to Damar Hamlin’s collapse shows athletes’ reluctance to grapple with mental health has subsided in recent years.

    Catch up quick: The league publicly offered mental health support to players in the hours after Hamlin suffered cardiac arrest and was resuscitated on the field during last week’s “Monday Night Football” game.

The big picture: The response by the league, players and coaches didn’t happen in a vacuum, Dallas Cowboys sports psychologist Yolanda Bruce Brooks tells Axios.

Be smart: The NFL hasn’t completely left behind its traditional machismo.

    Yes, but: It makes sense that those in the stadium that night felt traumatized by what they saw, said Comilla Sasson, a practicing emergency room physician in Denver.

Between the lines: CPR can be difficult for both bystanders and those administering the help, given the act involves chest compressions that must be hard enough to get oxygen to the brain, which sometimes yields broken ribs.

The bottom line: “What was different to me was how the Bills and their staff handled it,” Brooks said.

 

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