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The Effects of Playing High School Football on Later Life Cognitive Functioning and Mental Health

University of Pennsylvania logo

University of Pennsylvania

Status

Completed

Conditions

Depression
Memory Impairment
Executive Dysfunction

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to assess the effect of playing high school football on later in life cognitive functioning and mental health. This is an observational study that will use data from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study to compare high school football playing graduates in 1957 with comparable non-high school football playing graduates on cognitive functioning and mental health measures when participants are in their 60s.

Full description

The investigators will use data from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study (WLS) of graduates from Wisconsin high schools in 1957 to investigate the link between playing high-school football and later life depression and cognitive impairment. The WLS has a number of attractive features that make it well-suited for such a study. First, it records whether study participants participated in high school football and also includes detailed measurements of later-life mental health, psychological well-being, and cognition. Second, it includes a rich set of baseline covariates which the investigators will use to construct matched sets of treated and control individuals, including family background, adolescent characteristics, educational and occupational achievement and aspirations. Third, the WLS is one of the few longitudinal data sets that includes an administrative measure of childhood cognition. In short, the WLS provides a large data set that facilitates comparing the later life mental health and cognitive ability of men who played high school football to those who did not, after carefully controlling for a range of potential confounders. The investigators will compare the primary outcomes of the treated subjects to the primary outcomes of the control subjects, after controlling for baseline covariates via full matching with a propensity score caliper. The primary outcomes are depression (modified CES-D score) and cognitive functioning (average of z-scores for letter fluency and delayed word recall) when participants are age 65. Secondary outcomes that include cognitive scores on various domains, the Spielberger anger index, the Spielberger anxiety index and a hostility index will also be analyzed.

Enrollment

3,904 patients

Sex

Male

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

-- Male.

Exclusion criteria

  • No yearbook information available to determine football playing status
  • Activity participation in yearbook was not recorded under senior photo or in an index.
  • Did not played football but played another high contact sport (soccer, hockey, lacrosse or wrestling).

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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