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Common sense, boxing and
brain damage
By Dr. Raymond Monsell
M.D. Cardiff Wales U.K.
Medical officer to the Welsh Amateur Boxing Association
Member of Association of Ringside Physicians
March 2, 2006 - The sport of
boxing causes chronic brain damage, and is dangerous. Common
sense suggests this is true, and statements made by eminent doctors
over the years have now become accepted as scientific fact. Common
sense also tells us the world is flat, and statements made over
the years suggest the moon is made of cheese.
The problem
that we have in understanding the true danger involved in the
sport of boxing has been compounded over the time by selective
editing of scientific facts, to provide a skewed misrepresentation
of the risks involved in terms of boxers developing chronic brain
damage.
Many of the scientific articles published have been compromised
by a selection bias that results in any conclusions being largely
irrelevant to modern boxing as a whole. In simple terms, if you
take a group of boxers who clearly demonstrate evidence of chronic
brain damage, and then use them as a study group to look for
evidence of such brain damage, you are sure to come up with positive
findings that attest to the dangers of boxing.
The British Medical Association published a booklet entitled “The
Boxing Debate”. Contained within are graphic images of
the severely damaged boxers brains, the suggestion being that
this is what happens to all boxers. What they do not point out
is that the study group were men who fought anything between
300 and 800 professional bouts, between 1900 and 1940. It is
true that these men developed severe brain damage, which resulted
in many ending their days subject to institutionalised care.
The fact they died in asylums meant that their brains were readily
available for microscopic examination. Tens of thousands of men
also fought during this time, but their brains were never examined.
If you look for brain damage in a group of brain-damaged men,
you will come up with some convincing results.
A systematic review of all the available literature published
in eminent medical journals shows some interesting facts. Much
of the evidence cited to date has been derived from highly select
study groups, such that the conclusions cannot be directly applied
to the modern sport. The only statements that can be made with
any degrees of certainty are as follows: There is no conclusive
evidence that amateur boxing causes chronic brain damage. Some
professional boxers will develop a chronic brain syndrome related
to their exposure in the ring, as measured by number of losses
and draws, but not necessarily number of fights.
Some doctors seek to have the sport of boxing banned, claiming
to have “scientific proof”. This definitive proof
is lacking, and much more needs to be done to delineate the true
risks involved before boxing is banned on the grounds of supposed
scientific evidence of chronic damage.
Unfortunately scientific fact, common sense, and folklore have
become inextricably mixed together, such that many statements
repeated over the years transcend from folklore to scientific
fact, with no real proof.
Boxing is a dangerous sport. The risk of acute injury and death
is ever present, as with any contact or collision sport. The
risk of chronic damage is a separate issue, but the magnitude
of risk has been exaggerated in some quarters to procure a ban.
In reality, boxing exists for two reasons alone. People want
to box, and people want to watch them box. The fact that boxing
as a sport is condoned is witnessed by the viewing figures for
major fights, which attract tens of millions worldwide.
For many, boxing occupies the outer limit of morally acceptable
behaviour. The intent to injure the opponent is to them abhorrent.
If we as a society accept that boxing occupies this outer limit
of what is morally acceptable, then it must be of equal concern
to ask what would happen if boxing were banned. In time another
sport would take its place at the edge of morality. Should this
next sport then be banned for the same reasons? If we are to
continually draw in the limits of moral acceptability then where
do we stop? Ultimately society will decide that a given number
of sports are acceptable in terms of risk, danger and moral probity.
This is not a theoretical point in the future it is the situation
now. Society has drawn the limits, and boxing falls within.
It is not for the medical profession to seek a ban on this basic
freedom of expression, especially if the supposed scientific
basis of their argument is fundamentally flawed.
Until the facts can be more clearly defined, the medical profession
should not seek a ban on boxing by using moral arguments thinly
veiled in selectively edited quotes from scientific studies not
directly relevant to the modern sport.
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