The Price of Playing Through Pain: The Link Between Physical and Behavioral Health in Former NFL Athletes.

TitleThe Price of Playing Through Pain: The Link Between Physical and Behavioral Health in Former NFL Athletes.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsBush, E, Cupery, T, Turner, RW, Sonnega, A, Weir, D, Whitfield, KE, Jackson, JS
JournalAm J Mens Health
Volume14
Issue6
Pagination1557988320975541
Date Published2020 Nov-Dec
ISSN1557-9891
KeywordsAthletes, Cross-Sectional Studies, Football, Humans, Pain, Retirement
Abstract

Over the past decade, media outlets have drawn attention to some of the health consequences of playing in the National Football League (NFL), including how wear-and-tear and injuries accumulated during athletes' playing years can affect their physical, emotional, and behavioral health after retirement from professional sports. Through a secondary analysis of a cross-sectional telephone survey of former NFL athletes, this study estimated logistic regression models to assess the relationship between several forms of physical pain and anger attacks, controlling for binge drinking, signs of depression, functional limitations, NFL career duration, religious service attendance, and demographic characteristics (age, marital status, race, education, income, and wealth). The analytic sample included 1030 former NFL players. Neck pain, lower back pain, headaches/migraines, and the number of sites of pain were positively and significantly related to anger attacks. There was no significant association between joint pain and anger attacks. NFL career duration was negatively associated with anger attacks, as was religious service attendance. Future research should focus on factors that protect against affective aggression in former professional athletes and how protective factors can be adapted to the broader population.

DOI10.1177/1557988320975541
Alternate JournalAm J Mens Health
PubMed ID33251947
PubMed Central IDPMC7705796
Grant ListK01 AG054762 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States