President Obama on Thursday expressed his concern both as a parent and as a sports fan that too little is known about the lasting effects sports-related concussions have on young athletes.
Taking on the issue at the White House Thursday, the president brought together a range of sports organizations, medical experts, parent activists, and young athletes in an effort to counter a culture that expects athletes to play through serious injuries.
“We need more athletes to understand how important it is to do what we can to prevent injuries and to admit them when they do happen,” Obama said. “We have to change a culture that says ‘suck it up.’”
The president emphasized the importance of sports not only in his personal life — he has been open about his love of basketball and golf — but also his experience as a dad with two active teenage girls. First lady Michelle Obama has made youth nutrition and exercise a hallmark of her legacy in the White House, while Sasha and Malia Obama have tried out everything from track and field, to soccer and basketball, he said.
“Sports are important to our life as a family like they are for families all across the country,” Obama said.
The president first raised attention to the issue of sports injuries — particularly head trauma — after he admitted in an interview last year that if he had a son, he’d “have to think long and hard” before letting him play football.
A rise in a awareness around traumatic brain injuries in professional football has given the nation pause for whether similar adverse effects from the game could also impact young players.
The National Football League and former players reached a $765 million settlement over the impact of past concussions last year until a federal judge in January rejected preliminary approval.









