Still, as the only scope of her limitations, this work is quite extensive and it may say that it is a bit ambiguous. For example, she quickly listed human and animal studies, but her reliable sources were mixed at most. When I wanted to become concrete, like "280 participants from 11 to 22" (Sifferlin), she fully supported the reports of the Boston Children's Hospital and the Harvard Medical School Department. She even listed a lot of evidence found in journal pediatrics to support her other statements.
If they receive appropriate treatment, the body disease will heal and become appropriate. But what about concussion? What is the long-term impact? In a short article by Time magazine, Alexandra Cifelin is exploring the effects of concussion, especially when they are not disclosed, how they affect children. In her article "More concussion to prolong child recovery time" (Sifferlin), Alexandra claimed that "one or more concussions can prolong the recovery time of the child" (Sifferlin) It is. This is a good place to start a conversation.
Concussions rarely lead to long-term consequences. However, if repeated concussions occur before the previous concussion is fully recovered, multiple concussions can cause serious and sustained effects. The long-term effects of recurrent concussion or abnormally severe concussion include permanent cognitive (thinking) and emotional problems, especially depression. Boxing is known to cause concussion, but it is important to know that complete "removal" is not necessary to be the subject of such harm. If you add a persistent blow to your head, even if someone bangs your head and you see better then you can cause concussion. This fact is very relevant to ongoing research related to traumatic brain injury in football players. Other athletes, military activities, car accidents, other accidents can also cause concussion