Canadian researcher helps define new standards for diagnosing concussions
VANCOUVER — Remembering what happened after she hit her head on the ice while playing hockey is tough for Meg Kerekes, but she knows how that particular headache felt — “like a one-pound weight on the spot that got hit.”
“I forget if they took me out or if I finished the rest of the game. I think I might have finished the game,” she said of thesuspected concussion in September 2018 when she was playing amateur hockey during her high school years in Vancouver.
Her coach, who doubled as the person in charge of safety, suggested she stop playing and mentioned she may have a concussion.
“I didn’t go to a doctor or anything. They just didn’t let me play for two weeks,” said Kerekes, who suffered another hit to the head five months later when an opposing player slammed into her.