Concussions ended Scott Ramsay's hockey profession — however they've turn into his ardour as a nurse

As a part of his PhD in nursing from UBC, Ramsay tracked slightly below 23,000 youngsters and youth (ages 5-18) who have been recognized with concussions in 2016-17.

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Scott Ramsay receives his PhD in nursing from UBC this week, together with his concentrate on concussions in youth. And, on some stage, he was one in all his personal case research.

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Ramsay, 32, was a bruising, stay-at-home defenceman within the WHL for 4 seasons, a 6-foot-2, 218 pounder who break up time between the Chilliwack Bruins, Seattle Thunderbirds and Drugs Hat Tigers.

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The Abbotsford product was regarded extremely sufficient that he was a free-agent invite by the Anaheim Geese for the 2010 Younger Stars event in Penticton.

He needed to retire from the sport after the 2010-11 season, the sufferer of 5 concussions. He was 19 years previous.

He obtained a concussion throughout a struggle with Tayler Jordan of the Canucks at Younger Stars on Sept. 15, 2010, the again of his head hitting the ice because the bout got here to an finish. He performed his first WHL sport that season with Thunderbirds on Nov. 15, in opposition to the Vancouver Giants on the Pacific Coliseum, cleared by docs and instructed that he was wonderful to play.

scott ramsay
Anaheim Geese defenceman Scott Ramsay (left) and San Jose Sharks winger Curt Gogol (proper) struggle throughout first interval sport motion on the Younger Stars Match held in Penticton on Sept. 12, 2010. Picture by Larry Wong /Edmonton Journal/Publish

“My mother got here down after the sport and she or he mentioned, ‘You must go inform your coach proper now that you simply’re not OK, as a result of I simply watched you play a full sport and also you appear like a skeleton of your self,’” Ramsay recalled. “And she or he was proper. I’d search for and the rating clock was spinning. It was horrific.”

He went to high school after hockey, studied nursing and wound up with a job at B.C. Kids’s Hospital. He was based mostly within the emergency room as a part of his coaching and “and we saved getting these youngsters who would get concussions they usually had no training and that had me considering, ‘What’s occurring right here?’”

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He ultimately moved to the outpatient neurology clinic there, the place they deal with extra advanced concussion conditions, with sufferers who’re often six months previous their preliminary prognosis.

“I keep in mind this one child so vividly. Sun shades on, not capable of depart his room, blinds drawn, pitch black,” Ramsay mentioned. “All I might take into consideration was once I had my post-concussion syndrome. I’d be sitting on the sofa, my sun shades on, not capable of do something. It was simply so debilitating.”

That brings us again round to his dissertation. He checked out slightly below 23,000 instances throughout the province of kids and youth (ages 5-18) who have been recognized with concussions in 2016-17. He mentioned that slightly below 20 per cent had a well timed followup go to with a physician — outlined by Ramsay as a followup throughout the first month of their damage — and simply over 75 per cent had “no followup in any respect.”

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“That’s not a small pattern measurement. We’re not speaking 50 youngsters. We’re speaking 10s of 1,000s of children,” mentioned Ramsay. “On descriptive statistics alone, it’s fairly thoughts boggling to suppose that so many youngsters are affected simply in B.C. alone.”

His research discovered that when you have been from a decrease socioeconomic standing, you have been much less prone to have that well timed followup.

“It speaks to one thing in regards to the system on the whole. It says that these youngsters are seen after which left to their very own units in the event that they don’t have a very good household doctor or somebody to advocate for them,” Ramsay mentioned. “I see it and I work in it day by day and it frustrates me.

“I spend main elements of my day doing major care and looking for folks household docs.”

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For his dissertation, Scott Ramsay checked out slightly below 23,000 instances throughout B.C. of kids and youth who have been recognized with concussions in 2016-17. Picture by Jason Payne /PNG

Ramsay’s research additionally discovered that when you had a delayed followup or no observe up your odds of getting persistent publish concussion signs “have been mainly double.”

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“That’s telling us that there’s a approach to forestall these signs from occurring on this inhabitants and we’re doing nothing about it,” he defined. “As somebody who has lived it and tried to advocate for it at a number of ranges, it’s disappointing. I spend quite a lot of time giving folks insights into training and what assets can be found and what steps to take. I’m hoping that my subsequent stepping-stone in my profession can permit me to do extra for this inhabitants.”

He believes that a lot of that is tied to how society nonetheless views a concussion as an “invisible damage,” in contrast to when somebody has a forged or wants to make use of crutches.

He additionally says that “sports activities is the plain one, however I can’t let you know how a lot I deal exterior of sports activities as nicely. As a result of folks aren’t making an attempt to get again to a sport, there’s even much less assets out there.”

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“In different areas of well being care, the analysis is absolutely nice,” Ramsay continued. “In concussions, there’s quite a lot of easy care and analysis that we don’t do that would improve folks’s lives. From a disciplinary perspective and being a nurse, I believe I see issues in a different way than different well being care suppliers. I’m going to attempt to assist these populations which might be marginalized and don’t have entry to care or understudied.”

@SteveEwen

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