A major study conducted on the relationship between American football and brain disease is to continue without a US$30 million research grant from the NFL, ESPN reported on Tuesday.
A league grant of US$16 million over seven years was given to the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) in 2012 to finance the concussion research project, with the NFL saying it had no control over how the funds were spent.
However, ESPN, citing unnamed sources, reported the league backed out of the having its money finance the study when the NIH awarded the project to a group led by prominent Boston University researcher Robert Stern, a professor of neurology and neurosurgery who has been outspoken against the league.
“ESPN story is not accurate. NFL did not pull any funding. NIH makes its own decisions,” NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said on Twitter.
ESPN reported that the NFL’s decision not to fund the project delayed its announcement for months and forced the matter to top NIH officials before the decision was made that the study was too important not to fund.
The college on Tuesday announced the concussion research program, saying only that the NIH was funding the project, which aims to diagnose chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) in living patients.
Posthumous studies of the brain in former NFL players, including prominent suicide victims Junior Seau and Dave Duerson, showed each was impacted by CTE. It was found in 87 former NFL players over the past decade.
Stern has criticized NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, saying he inherited a concussion cover-up when he took over from Paul Tagliabue.
When the league made a concussion settlement, it was Stern who sent a 61-page letter of opposition, saying the payout amount was inadequate to compensate all deserving players, including many of the most severely injured.
“We want facts. The facts will help us deliver better solutions, and that’s why we’re advancing medical research. That’s why we’re funding directly to Boston University on some of this research,” Goodell told CBS last month, which is among the US TV networks that collectively pay US$39.6 billion for NFL broadcast rights through 2021.
The issue rises three days before the US debut of Concussion, a Will Smith film in which he stars as a doctor who discovers the first case of brain damage in a former NFL player in 2005.
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