Login  
Football Safety


All coaches are trained in CPR and Sports Safety by Cautilli CPR & Safety Training www.cautillicpr.com . The course is required of all coaches and punctuates the organization's emphasis on health and safety of each player.

Adult / Child CPR & AED certification

This comprehensive course is designed to teach coaches, trainers, referees/umpires and parent volunteers the knowledge and skills necessary to keep their athletes safe. Participants will learn how to care for life-threatening medical emergencies, and administer CPR to adults and children. Participants will also be taught the information and skills necessary for correct use of an Automated External Defibrillator (AED). In addition, an Emergency Action Plan (EAP) specific to Macclesfield, will be discussed in detail.Upon completion of this 2-3 hour course, all students will receive an Adult/Child CPR and AED certification card from the American Heart Association. Certification cards are valid for two years. No prior experience is necessary to take this class.

• There is “an absence of catastrophic head and neck injuries and disruptive joint injuries found at higher levels.” The injury rate in Pop Warner Football is:

• less than one-third the injury rate in high school football
• less than one-fifth the injury rate in college football
• less than one-ninth the injury rate in professional football


• Age-weight schematic protects younger, lighter players, who do not have higher injury rates.

• Organized football among 5 – 15 year-olds has 12 percent fewer injuries per capita than organized soccer in the same age range

• Organized football among 5 – 15 year-olds has 50 percent fewer injuries per capita than bicycle riding in the same age range.

• Organized football among 5 – 15 year-olds has 74 percent fewer injuries per capita than skateboarding in the same age group.

• Injuries in youth football are normally mild, and older players have a higher injury rate than younger players.

• The Institute of Sports Medicine and Athletic Trauma in New York completed a injury survey in 71 towns covering over 5,000 players in 1998. The injury experience of 5,128 boys (8 to 15 years of age, weight 22.5 to 67.5 kg [50 to 150 lb]) participating in youth football revealed an overall rate of significant injury of 5%, with 61% classified as moderate and 38.9% as major injuries. That's about 1.33 per team per year. No catastrophic injuries occurred, and it was rare for a permanent disability to result from any injury.

 

 

Lower Makefield Football Association
Box 382
Yardley, PA 19067-8382

Info@lmfafootball.org