Skip to main content
  • ActiveMapX Login
Home
  • Twitter
  • Home
  • WSNews
  • About Us
    • About Us
    • #LIKEaGIRL
    • ACTIVEMapX
  • #HerMoJo
  • Girls & SPORT
  • MoJoManuals
  • NEWS247
  • WSNews247

#HerMoJo - Are sportswomen more at risk from concussion? VIA: .@BBCSport

#HerMoJo - a gentle 'nudge' to help get more women & girls, more ACTIVE!

Women athletes are twice as likely as men to get concussed and the effects are more severe, but with research focusing mainly on men, is concussion in women being overlooked?

Few sports are as fast and furious as roller derby. The hour-long game unfolds in frenetic two-minute bursts as two teams race anti-clockwise around an oval track. Each team has a “jammer” aiming to pass four opposing “blockers”, and they score points for each opponent they lap. Blockers can obstruct the path with their torso or push opponents off course with a swift nudge of their upper legs or upper arms. Jammers “juke” – a sideways dummy move – and “whip” – where a team member grabs their hand and swings them forwards ahead of the pack. Fans are addicted to the ferocious drama of the competition, but, as you would expect for any contact sport, injuries are commonplace.
 
Jessica had just moved to the USA from France when she attended her first roller derby match. “From that first game I really fell in love with it,” she says. She started competing, eventually leading Team France in the 2011 World Cup, and even met her wife through the game. In the summer of 2016, Jessica was playing blocker for a team in the Bay Area, California. She was in front of the opposition’s jammer, and just as she turned to check her position, an opposing blocker collided with her at high speed. As the blocker’s shoulder hit the right side of her chin, Jessica felt an extraordinary pain on the opposite side of her skull and fell to the floor. The sudden jerking movement of her head, she now knows, caused her brain to ricochet within the skull – leading to the sharp pain and severe concussion.
 
She didn’t seek immediate medical care. When she had suffered concussion previously, her doctor’s advice was to take it easy for a few weeks before returning to play. And it had seemed to work fine.

MORE from BBC Sport 

For more updates follow @BBCSport

So why not join in? 

Promote your story/video on #WSNetTV Send a link to jo.c@wsnet.co.uk with some info about your exercise programme and stories from around the world.

Have you seen MoJoManuals? FOOTBALLMoJo, LACROSSEMoJo, ROWMoJo, NETBALLMoJo – www.WSNet.co.uk/MoJoManuals

MoJoManuals addressing the wide range of issues which teenage girls face as they engage in competitive sport. Predicated on 'Physical Literacy' but also cover a range of other emotive issues such as: body image, diet, fit or thin, social media, training with menstruation, coaching style etc. – which impact how girls engage/drop out of sport – and potentially go on to be elite athletes and confident, mature young women outside of sport.

Back to news list
Netball Mojo


  • Follow Us
  • Twitter

© The Women's Sport Network Ltd. 2025: Reg. No. 07784934 -
Registered in England & Wales. Registered Office: Warren Place, Birch Vale, Cobham, Surrey, KT11 2PX, UK

© HerMoJo, Twing_IT, WSN-TV, #WonderWall, WSNet, the WSNet 'Flower' & 'Petals' are registered trademarks and subject to worldwide copyrights of The Women's Sports Network Ltd. WSNet & its worldwide partners claim no rights to the term #ShowUP ©Twing_IT, HerMojo, #WonderWall, ACTIVEMapX - are operated by WSNet on a worldwide licence - all rights protected by the licensee

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Commercial
  • Google+

Newsletter Signup

WELCOME
The Women’s Sports Network

Is a self-funded, international cooperative of individuals working
independently as associates and part-time volunteers.
A not-for-profit community supporting women & girls
Empowerment via Sport into Leadership.
Please FEEL FREE to sign up for our ‘not too’ regular updates.