Sports Medicine: Clinicians fear NFL's concussion settlement program protocols discriminate against Black players

Clinicians fear NFL's concussion settlement program protocols discriminate against Black players
Data suggests race-based adjustments could have significant impact on payouts.
By
Pete Madden
,
Cho Park
and
Ryan Smith
February 3, 2021, 6:06 AM ET
• 17 min read
Clinicians see racial inequity in NFL concussion payoutsSome clinicians who evaluate former NFL players lament that the league’s protocols supersede their professional judgment.Nic Antaya/Getty Images, FILE
The NFL insists that its concussion settlement program does not require the clinicians who evaluate former players for payouts to make race a factor in their determinations. Several of those clinicians, however, appear to disagree, and some of them fear that the league’s recommended protocols discriminate against Black players.

In August, a group of neuropsychologists who measure cognitive decline in former NFL players seeking financial compensation through the league’s landmark settlement program took to their professional listservs to discuss some recent industry news. Two Black former players — defensive end Kevin Henry and running back Najeh Davenport — had filed a lawsuit against the NFL, accusing the league of “explicitly and deliberately” discriminating against Black players filing dementia-related claims.


The NFL has repeatedly dismissed the lawsuit as “entirely misguided,” claiming that the use of any so-called demographic corrections to interpret test results is left entirely up to “the sound discretion of the independent clinicians administering the tests in any particular case.”

But the former players are alleging that such corrections are, in effect, mandatory. And according to emails sent through private online forums, obtained by ABC News, some of those same clinicians lament that the league’s protocols supersede their professional judgement, sometimes leading to a “drastically different outcome” for former players seeking help.

One neuropsychologist claimed the league’s program manual offered no such flexibility: “I don't think we have the freedom to choose,” the clinician wrote. “If we do, apparently many of us have been doing it wrong.”

Another bemoaned their possible complicity in a system that perpetuated “racial inequity” in payouts: “Especially in the correct [sic] of our current state of affairs, I’m realizing and feeling regretful for my culpability in this inadvertent systemic racism issue,” the clinician wrote. “As a group we could have been better advocates.”

And another contended that while their “required reliance on these norms is spelled out in the manual,” it was still up to them to consider the consequences of their compliance: “Bottom line is that the norms do discriminate against Black players,” the clinician wrote. “So now what? In this time of reckoning, like many professions, I think we need to look closely at the expected and unexpected ramifications of our practices.”

In a pair of wide-ranging interviews with ABC News, which will be featured in a special edition of “Nightline” on Wednesday, Henry and Davenport blasted what they described as a two-pronged program that treats white players one way and Black players another.


“I just want to be looked at the same way as a white guy,” Henry told ABC News. “We bust chops together, bro. We went out together and we played hard together. You know what I mean? It wasn't a white or Black thing. We lost together. We won together.”

Kevin Henry, 52, played for the Pittsburgh Steeler from 1993 to 2000.ABC News
At the crux of the controversy: the NFL’s concussion settlement program manual recommends the use of a “full demographic correction,” in which a player’s cognitive test scores are compared to average scores, or “norms,” for similar demographic groups, and then adjusted to account for expected differences in age, gender, education — and race.

The practice, widely known as “race-norming,” is in use across several different medical fields as a supposed safeguard against misdiagnosis. But because these “norms” assume that the average Black player starts at a lower level of cognitive functioning than the average white player at the outset of their careers, the former players say, Black players need to show larger cognitive declines than white players to qualify for compensation.

“What the NFL is doing to us right now … when they use a different scale for African-Americans versus any other race?” Davenport said. “That's literally the definition of systematic racism.”

In response to questions from ABC News, an NFL spokesperson issued a statement saying that the concussion settlement, which has paid out more than $800 million to retirees and their families to date, was “agreed to by all parties, with the assistance of expert neuropsychological clinicians and approved by the courts more than five years ago” and “relied on widely accepted and long-established cognitive tests and scoring methodologies.”

“The settlement seeks to provide accurate examinations to retired players,” the spokesperson continued, “and thus permits, but does not require, independent clinicians to consider race in adjusting retired players’ test scores as they would in their typical practice.”

The NFL also emphasized the role of independent clinicians and third-party administrators in the process.

“The NFL Parties play no role in the independent clinicians’ examinations, and any resulting diagnoses are reviewed by a neutral court-appointed claims administrator,” an NFL spokesperson said. “Challenges to diagnoses are reviewed by neutral court-appointed special masters and ultimately the court itself.”

Attorney Christopher Seeger, who served as class counsel for the former NFL players and negotiated the landmark settlement with the league, issued a statement through a spokesperson that called on the court overseeing the administration of the settlement to issue a “clarification” on the issue.

“The use of race-based demographic norms is ultimately left to the clinical judgment of the neuropsychologist and is not mandated by the settlement,” Seeger said in a statement. “To the extent that there is any perceived confusion, we would support a clarification from the Court to make it clearer that the use of demographic adjustments, including for race, is not required, and that the neuropsychologist examining a player should use their professional judgment to select the appropriate demographic adjustments to apply to the player’s test results.”

The NFL Players Association, the labor union representing current and former players, declined to comment.

But Sen. Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon, part of a group of lawmakers who sent a letter to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell in September seeking more information on the league’s plans to “address alleged racial bias” in the system, said the practice would appear to undermine the NFL’s stated commitment to addressing racial inequity.

“If ABC’s reporting is true, the NFL has apparently pressured doctors to disqualify Black former NFL players from benefits they earned,” Wyden told ABC News. “Shortchanging former players based on their race is both racist and rank hypocrisy, in light of league’s promises to push for racial justice. The NFL needs to stop trying to run out the clock and finally start treating Black ex-players fairly.”

The NFL logo is pictured midfield during a football game.Nic Antaya/Getty Images, FILE
Race-norming has a long, fraught history, both inside and outside of medicine. But it has its proponents.

In a declaration submitted to the court overseeing the settlement, Dr. Scott Millis, one of the neuropsychologists who helped design the program, said the consideration of “demographic factors, including race, when assessing premorbid intellectual functioning” is both a “widely-used” and “commonly accepted” clinical practice.

“Race demographic normative adjustments, in particular, were designed and intended by the neuropsychological community to correct for the fact that certain racial groups were consistently obtaining disproportionately low scores on cognitive testing and thus were being incorrectly classified as cognitively impaired,” Millis wrote. “Misdiagnoses of cognitive impairments … can be very harmful. A misdiagnosed retired player could undergo unnecessary treatment, or plan his future based on a misunderstanding of his current abilities and likely progressive decline.”

Its critics, meanwhile, say the practice can perpetuate the problem it was designed to address.

In a paper published in JAMA Neurology in December, Dr. Katherine Possin of the Memory and Aging Center at the University of California, San Francisco, criticized the program and warned against “the use of race-adjusted norms as a crude proxy for lifelong social experience.”

“In many clinical situations, false negatives cause even greater harm, such as when needed services are deemed unnecessary,” Posssin and her colleagues wrote. “This case is reminiscent of a damaging, century-long history of assuming that differences on intelligence tests (IQ) are primarily inherited and then using this false assumption to legitimize unequal distribution of resources by social class.”

Henry, 52, played eight seasons in the NFL from 1993 to 2000, all of them for the Pittsburgh Steelers. After he retired, Henry briefly worked for Coca-Cola, but the job didn’t last long. He says he began experiencing headaches, memory loss and depression, all of which he suspected were the result of the repeated head injuries, including 10 concussions, he says he suffered during his playing career. He hoped the NFL’s concussion settlement program could provide a lifeline.

In 2017, Henry was evaluated by a neuropsychologist and a neurologist, who gave him a battery of tests to measure his overall cognitive functioning, including language, learning and memory. They determined that Henry was suffering from a “severe” cognitive impairment consistent with “mild dementia,” which qualified him for compensation from the league. But the claims administrator rejected Henry’s application, citing multiple factors, including concerns about the validity of his performance on the tests and the use of “incorrect normative scores.”

In 2019, Henry was tested again, this time by a different clinician. This time, the clinician applied the “full demographic correction” recommended in the program manual. This time, Henry did not qualify for compensation, leaving him baffled that he should be put in a different category than some of his former teammates.

“I felt so betrayed and I still feel that way,” Henry told ABC News. “Two different systems. How can that be OK?”

Davenport, 41, had a similar experience. He played seven seasons in the NFL from 2002 to 2008, most of them for the Green Bay Packers. In the years after he retired, he obtained an advanced degree and worked in education. But he says he began to experience similar symptoms, which he associated with his history head trauma. In 2019, Davenport was evaluated by Dr. Charles Golden, a Florida-based neuropsychologist who then evaluated former players for compensation through the program.

Golden determined that Davenport was cognitively impaired, and believing that race-norming was merely a recommendation, he did not apply the full demographic correction. But when Davenport applied for compensation, the NFL appealed, arguing that Davenport’s testing was “invalid” and “his neuropsychological test scores may have been calculated with improper demographic norm adjustments.”

“They said why didn't you use the Black norms?” Golden told ABC News. “And I wrote back, basically, ‘I didn't use the Black norms because I thought it was unfair to apply one set of norms to one of the player groups, another set of norms to another group of players.’”

The special masters handling the dispute, however, was dissatisfied with Golden’s reasoning, saying “significant questions remains as to what system of adjustments Dr. Golden used in assessing Mr. Davenport, and how reflective that approach is of his general practice.” They granted the appeal in part and remanded Davenport’s claim to the administrator to seek more information from Golden.

Emails obtained by ABC News suggest that Golden’s experience was not an isolated incident.

In August, a neuropsychologist who evaluated former NFL players through the concussion settlement program told colleagues that clinicians faced consequences for anything less than strict adherence to the program’s guidelines.

“My experience,” the clinician wrote, “is that when clinicians deviate from the algorithm, there are multiple inquiries levied at them.”

Another clinician responded, calling that assessment “right on target.”

“The concern for me would be taking the decision out of the clinician’s hands about whether the race variable should be used in norming regardless of the individual history,” the clinician wrote. “Should the 'premorbid functioning' of someone who completed a graduate degree and had a successful career in another field after retiring from football be assumed to be lower simply because of race?”

“I think nuanced arguments like this,” the clinician added, “and well-reasoned deviations from the standard approach are not very likely to be listened to.”

Dr. Charles Golden is a Florida-based neuropsychologist who evaluated Najeh Davenport in 2019.ABC News
Exactly how many former players might have been denied compensation as a result of race-norming remains unclear.

The NFL has issued payouts for more than 1,200 of the more than 3,100 claims it has received to date, but the league has repeatedly rebuffed requests — including a request from ABC News — to release demographic data on program payouts, making it difficult to determine whether race-based adjustments have skewed payouts along racial lines.

Cy Smith of the law firm Zuckerman Spaeder, which represents Henry and Davenport, said his own attempts to pry the data from the league have been unsuccessful.

“We've asked the NFL … for that information, and they haven't told us,” Smith told ABC News. “We're sure that that information is out there. And we're highly confident that it will show that Black players have been disapproved at higher rates than white players. But we don't have those data yet.”

ABC News, however, was able to obtain a data analysis that suggests that the impact of the practice on payouts could be significant.

At the request of an attorney who represents several former NFL players, a neuropsychologist who has evaluated former NFL players under the concussion settlement program recently re-scored the results of cognitive tests from a group of 94 Black former players. The resulting dataset was shared exclusively with ABC News.

Nine tests were deemed “incomplete” because of “missing raw scores,” leaving a sample of 85 scores recorded by approximately 40 different clinicians between 2016 and 2020. When the clinician interpreted the test scores as if those former players had been white, 34 of them met the criteria to receive payouts through the program. When the clinician applied the recommended demographic correction to those same scores, however, only 10 of those same players qualified.

Eight former players who were initially scored at a “Level 2” neurocognitive impairment, which according to the program manual signifies “moderate dementia” with evidence of a “severe decline” in cognitive functioning, were adjusted to a “Level 0,” signifying no impairment, after the correction was applied.

An additional 13 players who were initially scored at a “Level 1.5” neurocognitive impairment, which according to the program manual signifies “early dementia” with evidence of a “moderate to severe decline” in cognitive functioning, were also adjusted to a “Level 0.”

In response to questions about the data from ABC News, an NFL spokesperson defended the practice.

“Adjustments in test scores based on age, education, race, and gender have been used by clinicians in every-day clinical neuropsychological practice, and were developed by neuropsychological experts to achieve diagnostic accuracy, many years before the settlement’s creation,” the spokesperson said. “Normative adjustments for race, in particular, were developed to correct rather than perpetrate racial bias in neuropsychological tests which, without adjustment, were misdiagnosing Black test-takers as cognitively impaired at up to three times the rate as White test-takers.”

Smith, however, offered a different takeaway.

“The NFL has embraced a racially discriminatory scheme for adjusting these test scores,” Smith told ABC News. “That's what Kevin Henry and Najeh Davenport have in common with hundreds or thousands of other Black retired players under the settlement agreement.”

Davenport Caption: Najeh Davenport, 41, played for three different NFL teams from 2002 to 2008.ABC News
A third former NFL player has since joined Henry and Davenport in challenging this process in federal court.

In October, former NFL defensive end Amon Gordon, who played for eight different teams from 2004 to 2012, reportedly appealed the denial of his application for compensation on a similar basis.

The medical literature on race norming continues to shift amid an ongoing racial reckoning across many major industries. Last year, a group of Harvard-affiliated doctors highlighted the “potential dangers” of “race-adjusted algorithms” they identified in several different medical fields in a paper published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

“When clinicians insert race into their tools, they risk interpreting racial disparities as immutable facts rather than as injustices that require intervention,” the doctors wrote. “Researchers and clinicians must distinguish between the use of race in descriptive statistics, where it plays a vital role in epidemiologic analyses, and in prescriptive clinical guidelines, where it can exacerbate inequities."

And Henry and Davenport are seeking, in addition monetary damages, a declaration that the “compelled or presumptive use of race-adjusted normative data to the detriment of Black Settlement Class members under the auspices of the Settlement Agreement is illegal under federal law.”

Henry said he’s fighting not only for former players, like himself, but for current ones.

“That's the only reason why I'm doing this. That's going to be a group of guys that are going to come behind me. I’m coming out for them,” Henry told ABC News. “They don't think they need me, but they need me. Now. You need me. You need me speaking out because you're going to need me. You're going to need me later. They're going to do you just like they doing me.”

Dr. Leah Croll, a resident physician at NYU Langone Health and a member of the ABC Medical Unit, contributed to this report.
 
.

NFL concussion lawsuit payouts reveal how racial bias in science continues

The first week of the 2020 National Football League (NFL) season occurred amid a growing social justice movement in professional sport. While other athletes protested police violence and honoured Black victims, the NFL games included a “moment of unity” against racism. Slogans “End Racism” and “It Takes All of Us” featured prominently.

Meanwhile, two former players, Najeh Davenport and Kevin Henry, have accused the NFL of discriminating against Black players seeking compensation through the league’s concussion settlement. Both men — who are Black — allege race-based adjustments to neurocognitive test scores resulted in their ineligibility for dementia-related payments.

Having studied responses to brain injury and degenerative brain diseases among former NFL players, we acknowledge this latest criticism is only one of several problems with the league’s concussion settlement. Davenport and Henry’s complaint, however, highlights inequalities beyond workplace compensation. It is an example of how racial science continues to harm Black people by upholding racist beliefs about white superiority.

If Black lives matter, science — like the criminal justice system — needs to reckon with the fact that its struggles with racism are not a thing of the past.

Unbiased. Nonpartisan. Factual.
Our daily newsletter
NFL concussion settlement
In response to a class action lawsuit filed on behalf of more than 4,500 ex-players in 2012, the NFL agreed to a settlement of US$765 million in 2014. The final agreement allowed for up to US$1 billion in compensation for retired players with serious medical conditions linked to repeated head trauma.

The settlement has been criticized for a variety of reasons. It precluded further investigation into the NFL’s conduct and delivered a relatively small award compared to the league’s annual revenue.

More problems arose when ex-players began filing claims. Revelations about conflicts of interest, predatory lenders targeting applicants and significant payment delays came to light.

To date, retired players have received around $720 million for neurocognitive problems, including more than $300 million for dementia. However, more than two-thirds of the approximately 3,000 dementia-related claims have been denied. Davenport and Henry’s claims raise questions about how racial biases may contribute to the low rate of dementia-related awards.

Scientific discrimination
Davenport and Henry’s legal complaint describes “a discriminatory testing regime” where doctors can apply different baseline standards:

Black former players have been automatically assumed, through a statistical manipulation called ‘race-norming,’ to have started with worse cognitive functioning than white former players.
The use of race-norming in neuropsychology seeks to account for historical trends showing Black people may have lower average scores on cognitive tests than white people. The rationale for creating lower benchmark scores for Black people is to prevent them from being subject to overdiagnosis of cognitive impairment.

Race-norming adjusts for racial biases within the cognitive tests, but it does not eliminate them. The practice glosses over the diversity of experiences and can perpetuate sweeping ideas about inherent differences between racial groups.

In the NFL’s case, the lower average baseline makes it harder for Black award applicants to demonstrate they have suffered severe cognitive impairment compared to their white counterparts. The complaint emphasizes Davenport and Henry would have qualified for awards had this race-based requirement not been in place. Four U.S. lawmakers have written to NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, expressing concerns that the assessment process violates equal protection requirements.


Green Bay Packers’ Najeh Davenport breaks away from St. Louis Rams’ Rich Coady (25) for a 40-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter on Nov. 29, 2004, in Green Bay, Wis. (AP Photo/Morry Gash, File)Challenging racial science

The issues in the NFL concussion awards reflect broader concerns around the misuse of race in medicine and science. In early September, a letter published in Science called on the U.S. National Institutes of Health to address the misguided tendency to analyze race categories as if they are indicators of inherent racial differences. The focus on race overlooks how racism interacts with other inequalities.

Environmental, social and structural disparities — not biological characteristics — are drivers of poorer health outcomes in Black, Indigenous and other communities of colour. By using the category of race to stand in for cultural, socioeconomic and educational experiences, the NFL’s baseline for measuring neurocognitive damage is an inaccurate representation of differences between groups of players. It is an instance of “biosocial determinism,” which misrepresents how societal conditions affect discrepancies in brain health and function.

The concussion award assessments demonstrate how science can buttress deceptively simple biological explanations and downplay the impact of systemic inequalities.

Why sport matters
Sport has been — and continues to be — an influential space in which race-based claims have shaped perceptions of athletes’ bodies and their abilities.

Read more: The oppressive seeds of the Colin Kaepernick backlash

Myths about the biological superiority (and intellectual shortcomings) of Black athletes influence media coverage, player scouting and evaluation practices. “Stacking” Black players into different positions than white players is still common in football.

Sport science has long bolstered misguided beliefs by offering measures that seemingly validate cultural stereotypes about racial difference. Davenport and Henry’s legal complaint highlights how the NFL continues to use racial science even as the league claims to promote support racial justice.
 
This is not a real surprise these owners LITERALLY don't care about Black players

There isn't any more blatant acts they can commit

Cause these owners made sure to wipe their collective asses with the Rooney rule

And donate MILLIONS to causes completely opposite of black interests
 

Report: Some clinicians fear concussion settlement discriminates against Black players
Posted by Mike Florio on February 3, 2021, 8:18 PM EST

In August, two former players filed a class action alleging that the concussion settlement discriminates against Black players by assuming a lower baseline cognitive function. On Wednesday, ABC News issued a report that seemingly substantiates the notion that race has been a factor in determining whether Black players receive concussion benefits.

The lengthy article can best be summarized by its opening paragraph: “The NFL insists that its concussion settlement program does not require the clinicians who evaluate former players for payouts to make race a factor in their determinations. Several of those clinicians, however, appear to disagree, and some of them fear that the league’s recommended protocols discriminate against Black players.”

ABC News has obtained emails sent through private online forums in which clinicians reportedly “lament that the league’s protocols supersede their professional judgment, sometimes leading to a ‘drastically different outcome’ for former players seeking help.” One clinician “bemoaned their possible complicity in a system that perpetuated ‘racial inequity’ in payouts.”

“Bottom line is that the norms do discriminate against Black players,” another clinician wrote. “So now what? In this time of reckoning, like many professions, I think we need to look closely at the expected and unexpected ramifications of our practices.”

At the core of this specific problem is the reality that Black players with potentially diminished cognitive capacity due to playing football are compared to an unreasonably low baseline, due to the practice known as “race-norming.” Basically, clinicians using those standards ultimately find lesser or no cognitive impairment by assuming that the pre-existing cognitive ability was lower than it would be in other players.

The NFL’s position continues to be that the concussion settlement and all protocols for implementing it resulted from a careful negotiation among the lawyers and an agreement that ultimately was approved by a federal court.

In response to questions from ABC News, the NFL said it the settlement procedures were “agreed to by all parties, with the assistance of expert neuropsychological clinicians and approved by the courts more than five years ago” and “relied on widely accepted and long-established cognitive tests and scoring methodologies.”

Added the NFL: “Normative adjustments for race, in particular, were developed to correct rather than perpetrate racial bias in neuropsychological tests which, without adjustment, were misdiagnosing Black test-takers as cognitively impaired at up to three times the rate as White test-takers. The settlement seeks to provide accurate examinations to retired players and thus permits, but does not require, independent clinicians to consider race in adjusting retired players’ test scores as they would in their typical practice. The NFL Parties play no role in the independent clinicians’ examinations, and any resulting diagnoses are reviewed by a neutral court-appointed claims administrator. Challenges to diagnoses are reviewed by neutral court-appointed special masters and ultimately the court itself.”

Christopher Seeger, who served as class counsel in the concussion lawsuit, issued a statement to ABC News supporting a clarification from the presiding judge.

“The use of race-based demographic norms is ultimately left to the clinical judgment of the neuropsychologist and is not mandated by the settlement,” Seeger said in a statement to ABC News. “To the extent that there is any perceived confusion, we would support a clarification from the Court to make it clearer that the use of demographic adjustments, including for race, is not required, and that the neuropsychologist examining a player should use their professional judgment to select the appropriate demographic adjustments to apply to the player’s test results.”
If that’s what Seeger wants, he shouldn’t issue a statement; he should file the appropriate paperwork with the court.

Ultimately, the question is whether the concussion settlement does or doesn’t illegally discriminate against based on race or, more broadly, whether the medically-accepted standards for determining cognitive impairment illegally discriminates based on race. If the answer to either question is yes, that’s a problem that someone in a position of appropriate power needs to address.
 
Report: Some clinicians fear concussion settlement discriminates against Black players
Posted by Mike Florio on February 3, 2021, 8:18 PM EST


Getty Images

In August, two former players filed a class action alleging that the concussion settlement discriminates against Black players by assuming a lower baseline cognitive function. On Wednesday, ABC News issued a report that seemingly substantiates the notion that race has been a factor in determining whether Black players receive concussion benefits.

The lengthy article can best be summarized by its opening paragraph: “The NFL insists that its concussion settlement program does not require the clinicians who evaluate former players for payouts to make race a factor in their determinations. Several of those clinicians, however, appear to disagree, and some of them fear that the league’s recommended protocols discriminate against Black players.”

ABC News has obtained emails sent through private online forums in which clinicians reportedly “lament that the league’s protocols supersede their professional judgment, sometimes leading to a ‘drastically different outcome’ for former players seeking help.” One clinician “bemoaned their possible complicity in a system that perpetuated ‘racial inequity’ in payouts.”

“Bottom line is that the norms do discriminate against Black players,” another clinician wrote. “So now what? In this time of reckoning, like many professions, I think we need to look closely at the expected and unexpected ramifications of our practices.”

At the core of this specific problem is the reality that Black players with potentially diminished cognitive capacity due to playing football are compared to an unreasonably low baseline, due to the practice known as “race-norming.” Basically, clinicians using those standards ultimately find lesser or no cognitive impairment by assuming that the pre-existing cognitive ability was lower than it would be in other players.
The NFL’s position continues to be that the concussion settlement and all protocols for implementing it resulted from a careful negotiation among the lawyers and an agreement that ultimately was approved by a federal court.

In response to questions from ABC News, the NFL said it the settlement procedures were “agreed to by all parties, with the assistance of expert neuropsychological clinicians and approved by the courts more than five years ago” and “relied on widely accepted and long-established cognitive tests and scoring methodologies.”

Added the NFL: “Normative adjustments for race, in particular, were developed to correct rather than perpetrate racial bias in neuropsychological tests which, without adjustment, were misdiagnosing Black test-takers as cognitively impaired at up to three times the rate as White test-takers. The settlement seeks to provide accurate examinations to retired players and thus permits, but does not require, independent clinicians to consider race in adjusting retired players’ test scores as they would in their typical practice. The NFL Parties play no role in the independent clinicians’ examinations, and any resulting diagnoses are reviewed by a neutral court-appointed claims administrator. Challenges to diagnoses are reviewed by neutral court-appointed special masters and ultimately the court itself.”

Christopher Seeger, who served as class counsel in the concussion lawsuit, issued a statement to ABC News supporting a clarification from the presiding judge.

“The use of race-based demographic norms is ultimately left to the clinical judgment of the neuropsychologist and is not mandated by the settlement,” Seeger said in a statement to ABC News. “To the extent that there is any perceived confusion, we would support a clarification from the Court to make it clearer that the use of demographic adjustments, including for race, is not required, and that the neuropsychologist examining a player should use their professional judgment to select the appropriate demographic adjustments to apply to the player’s test results.”
If that’s what Seeger wants, he shouldn’t issue a statement; he should file the appropriate paperwork with the court.

Ultimately, the question is whether the concussion settlement does or doesn’t illegally discriminate against based on race or, more broadly, whether the medically-accepted standards for determining cognitive impairment illegally discriminates based on race. If the answer to either question is yes, that’s a problem that someone in a position of appropriate power needs to address.
 
@playahaitian @jack walsh13


PHILADELPHIA -- A federal judge on Monday dismissed a lawsuit that challenged "race-norming"in dementia tests for retired NFL players, a practice that some say makes it harder for Black athletes to show injury and qualify for awards.

A hearing had been set for Thursday. The judge instead ordered the NFL and the lead lawyer in the overall $1 billion settlement to resolve the issue through mediation. That process would appear to exclude the Black players who sued.

"We are deeply concerned that the Court's proposed solution is to order the very parties who created this discriminatory system to negotiate a fix," said lawyer Cyril V. Smith, who represents ex-players Kevin Henry and Najeh Davenport. "The class of Black former players whom we represent must have a seat at the table and a transparent process."

The demographic factors that doctors consider during testing for dementia often include race. If so, lawyers say, the testing assumes that Black athletes start with worse cognitive functioning than white people -- which means it's harder for them to show a deficit and qualify for awards. Both Henry and Davenport were denied awards but would have qualified had they been white, according to their lawsuit.


Smith hoped to learn the scope of the problem through discovery as the lawsuit progressed, but the dismissal by Senior U.S. District Judge Anita B. Brody in Pennsylvania means he may never know how many Black players lost out on payments because of the practice.

Brody has steered the litigation since the first suits were filed in 2011, alleging that the NFL had long hidden what it knew about the link between concussions and brain injuries. The judge also ordered secret negotiations then that led to the surprise settlement of the case -- long before discovery or trial -- in 2013.

The settlement fund has so far paid more than $765 million to retired players for neurocognitive problems linked to NFL concussions, including about $335 million for dementia. Payments are expected to top $1 billion long before the 65-year settlement plan ends.

The dementia claims have proved especially contentious. Many of them have been denied, often after challenges from the NFL.

Smith believes the "race-norming" practice violates federal law and wants to see doctors banned from using it. He also wants to ensure that Black players denied awards for dementia get a chance to be reexamined.

Spokespeople for both the NFL and lead class counsel Christopher Seeger did not immediately return calls seeking comment Monday. League spokesman Brian McCarthy called the lawsuit "entirely misguided" when it was filed last year.


"The settlement program ... was the result of arm's-length, comprehensive negotiations between the NFL and Class Counsel, was approved by the federal courts after a searching review of its fairness, and always contemplated the use of recognized statistical techniques to account for demographic differences such as age, education and race," he said at the time in a statement.

Seeger, at the time, said he had seen no evidence of racial bias in the settlement program. He said that the testing was designed by leading experts and approved by Brody and that it was up to the evaluating physician to decide whether to include race as a factor.

Henry, who played for the Pittsburgh Steelers from 1993 to 2000, said his claim was denied although he suffers from headaches, depression and memory loss that leave him unable to hold a job.

Davenport, who played for the Steelers, Green Bay Packers and Indianapolis Colts from 2002 to 2008, said he suffered more than 10 concussions, including one that broke his eye socket and left him unconscious. He was approved for an award until the NFL appealed, asking that his test results be recalculated using racial norms, Smith said. By that measurement, his claim would fail.
 
Last edited:
@dik cashmere


NFL families seek to end ‘race-norming’ in $1bn concussion settlement
  • Lawyers have battled over ‘race-norming’ in NFL dementia tests
  • NFL algorithm assumes lower cognitive skills for Black players
Former NFL players Ken Jenkins, right, and Clarence Vaughn III, center right, along with their wives, Amy Lewis, center, and Brooke Vaughn, left, carry tens of thousands of petitions demanding equal treatment for everyone involved in the settlement of concussion claims against the NFL, to the federal courthouse in Philadelphia on Friday. Photograph: Matt Rourke/AP

Associated Press
Fri 14 May 2021 14.21 EDT

11

Thousands of retired Black professional football players, their families and supporters are demanding an end to the controversial use of “race-norming” to determine which players are eligible for payouts in the NFL’s $1 billion settlement of brain injury claims, a system experts say is discriminatory.
Former Washington running back Ken Jenkins, 60, and his wife Amy Lewis on Friday delivered 50,000 petitions demanding equal treatment for Black players to senior US district judge Anita B Brody in Philadelphia, who is overseeing the massive settlement. Former players who suffer dementia or other diagnoses can be eligible for a payout.

Under the settlement, however, the NFL has insisted on using a scoring algorithm on the dementia testing that assumes Black men start with lower cognitive skills. They must therefore score much lower than whites to show enough mental decline to win an award. The practice, which went unnoticed until 2018, has made it harder for Black former players to get awards.
Advertisement
Where will Aaron Rodgers play in 2021? Here are sixpotential landing spots



SKIP AD

“My reaction was, ‘Well, here we go again,’” said Jenkins, a former running back. “It’s the same old nonsense for Black folks, to have to deal with some insidious, convoluted deals that are being made.” Jenkins is now an insurance executive and is not experiencing any cognitive problems, but has plenty of NFL friends who are less fortunate.
In March, Brody threw out a civil rights lawsuit that claimed the practice is discriminatory. But she later said in a filing that the practice raised “a very important issue” and asked a magistrate judge to compile a report on the problem. She told the Associated Press she did not know when it would be completed.
The majority of the league’s 20,000 retirees are Black. And only a quarter of the more than 2,000 men who sought awards for early to moderate dementia have qualified under the testing program. Lawyers for Black players have asked for details on how the $800 million in settlement payouts so far have broken along racial lines, but have yet to receive them.
Race norming is sometimes used in medicine as a rough proxy for socioeconomic factors that can affect someone’s health. Experts in neurology said the way it’s used in the NFL settlement is too simplistic and restrictive, and has the effect of systematically discriminating against Black players.
“Because every Black retired NFL player has to perform lower on the test to qualify for an award than every white player. And that’s essentially systematic racism in determining these payouts,” said Katherine Possin, a neurology professor at the UCSF Memory and Aging Center.
In other major settlements, including those tied to the the September 11 terrorist attacks and the Boston Marathon bombing, all claimants were treated the same.
Advertisement

“We concluded, fairly quickly, that we would take the top compensation for the white male and everyone would get the same, the top dollar,” said lawyer Ken Feinberg, who has overseen many of the largest settlement funds. Feinberg said. “We would cure this compensatory discrimination by having a rising tide raise all ships.”
The first lawsuits accusing the NFL of hiding what it knew about the link between concussions and brain damage were filed in 2011. A trickle soon became a deluge, and the NFL, rather than risk a trial, agreed in 2013 to pay $765 million over 65 years for certain diagnoses, including Alzheimer’s disease and dementia. But as the claims poured in, Brody feared the fund would run out early and ordered the cap removed.
The NFL, which foots the bill, began challenging claims by the hundreds, according to the claims website.
In appealing one filed by Najeh Davenport, the NFL complained that his doctor had not used “full demographic norms” in the cognitive scoring. That meant factoring in age, education, gender – and race.
“I remain unsure what you are talking about. He was done using standard norms like everyone else. Using different racial standards is indeed discriminatory and illegal. We stand by our scores,” the physician said in response, according to court records.
Ultimately, the appeal was reviewed by a pair of University of Pennsylvania legal scholars serving as special masters for Brody. They rejected the original reviewer’s finding that race norms were mandatory under the settlement. Still, they concluded that Davenport’s doctor had to explain whether he typically uses them or only waived them so Davenport would get an award.
“Using race-specific norms can be enormously consequential, and the adjustments may often make the difference in a clinician’s determination of cognitive impairment and a determination of normal functioning for retired NFL players seeking benefits,” special masters David A Hoffman and Wendell E Pritchett wrote in the 20 August decision.
Days later, Davenport and another former Pittsburgh Steeler, Kevin Henry, filed the civil rights lawsuit, calling public attention to the issue for the first time. Their lawyers hoped to learn through the litigation how often Black players are denied payouts.
Instead, Brody dismissed the suit, saying they were bound by the settlement because they had not opted out years ago. But as concerns about race-norming grew – and with the racial unrest of 2020 still simmering – Brody in April opened the door to changing the practice when she ordered lawyers for the league and the players back to the table to work out an agreement.
Advertisement

Jennifer Manley, a Columbia University neuropsychologist hired by Davenport’s lawyers, called race norms in medicine ill-conceived and outdated in a court filing.
Race-based adjustments for neurology – known as “Heaton norms” – were designed in the early 1990s by Dr Robert Heaton to estimate how socioeconomic factors affect someone’s health. They are widely used, but in recent years, scientists in the field have begun to recognize the limitations of the normative comparison groups they have used for years.
The small sample group of Blacks Heaton chose to create his adjustment protocol came entirely from San Diego, a military town where the Black population hardly reflected the diversity of Blacks across the US. The racial classifications are also binary – Black or white — even though hundreds of NFL retirees, and millions of Americans, identify as mixed race.
’White and Black retired NFL players may be more similar to each other than they are to the reference populations ... used to develop Heaton or (other) race-specific norms,” Manley wrote in her brief in the Davenport lawsuit. Several neurology experts have said the NFL’s assessment program is flawed. Possin said UCSF had considered participating in the assessments but decided against it.
“We declined to participate in these evaluations because it just didn’t feel like good clinical practice to us,” Possin said. “There’s probably a number of these players who, the neurologists who evaluated them were pretty sure they had a neurodegenerative disease and they had dementia. But maybe they didn’t score quite low enough. They didn’t pass the threshold, so they didn’t meet the NFL settlement criteria for a payout. And that’s really, I think, unfortunate.”
Dr Francis X Conidi, a neurologist and former president of the Florida Neurologic Society, who has treated hundreds of former NFL players, wrote a critique of the settlement’s assessment program in 2018, saying it had developed a system where players would be classified with “fictional diagnostic categories” of level 1, level 1.5 and level 2 neurocognitive impairments. Only those classified as levels 1.5 or 2 would qualify for a settlement.
Conidi said these categories could leave the patient confused about the cause of his symptoms and recommended that they adopt a protocol that includes a standard workup for dementia, including neuroimaging and other testing that is not currently done under the assessments.
The NFL’s dementia testing evaluates a person’s function in two dozen skills that fall under five sections: complex attention/processing speed; executive functioning; language; learning and memory; and visual perception. A player must show a marked decline in at least two of them to get an award.
Advertisement

In an example shared with The Associated Press, one player’s raw score of 19 for “letter-number sequencing” in the processing section was adjusted using “race-norming” and became 42 for whites and 46 for Blacks.
The raw score of 15 for naming animals in the language section became a 35 for whites and 41 for Blacks. And the raw score of 51 for “block design” in the visual perception section became a 53 for whites but 60 for Blacks.
Taking the 24 scores together, either a white or Black player would have scored low enough to reach the settlement’s 1.5-level of early dementia in “processing speed.” However, in the language section, the scores would have qualified a white man for a 2.0-level, or moderate, dementia finding – but shown no impairment for Blacks.
Overall, the scores would result in a 1.5-level dementia award for whites – but nothing for Blacks. Those awards average more than $400,000 but can reach $1.5 million for men under 45, while 2.0-level dementia yields an average payout of more than $600,000 but can reach $3 million.
Breton Asken, a neuropsychology fellow at the UCSF Memory and Aging Center, helped administer several assessments around 2016, when he was a student at the University of Florida. The assessments he was involved in took 4 to 6 hours, and produced a score, which would then be adjusted based on the Heaton norms.
“So the male Black athletes that we saw would be compared essentially to a group of otherwise healthy Black individuals with a similar number of years of education and of the same age,” Asken said.
Even at the time, he said he and his colleagues worried the assessments and adjustments were not appropriate.
“I think we were always hesitant to be robotic about this,” Asken said. “We understood from a legal standpoint why there’s a push and a need for making something a little more algorithmic and robotic, that it can be standardized and so forth. But I think there’s also a lot of challenges when you take expert clinical decision-making out of things.”
They would report the person’s level of impairment by the “letter of the law” and would also provide comments conveying “anything else we thought was relevant to the patient’s brain health, physical health, mental health and so forth that we thought would be important for us to include in something like a standard neuropsychological report.”
The test battery also included questionnaires about mood and personality. But those scores were not included in the algorithm to determine compensation, he said.
Advertisement

“They’re getting full neurologic exams from these neurologists who are able to pick up on other aspects of the nervous system that might be having problems and so forth. Feels very odd for us to put this comprehensive neuropsychological report together and just ignore those pieces of data,” Asken recalled.
“Norming by race is not the stance that the NFL ought to take,” said Dr Art Kaplan, a New York University medical ethicist. “It continues to look as if it’s trying to exclude people rather than trying to do what’s right, which is to help people that, clinically, have obvious and severe disability.” He noted that the long history of racial bias in medicine includes the long-held myth that Black people feel less pain.
“There’s always been this race-norming in medicine,” he said, “that has been problematic because it’s tied in too closely to racism.”
Jenkins, the former Washington player, believes it all comes down to money.
“Race-norming may have had a benign origin, but it quickly morphed into a tool that can be used to help the folks in power save money,” he said.
Yet Kaplan is not alone in thinking there may be even more at play here: the future of the NFL.
“These may be fights to escape the conclusion that football’s too dangerous. That’s always looming in the background,” Kaplan said. “That opens the door to a lot of moms saying ‘I’m not sure that’s the right sport for my kid.’”
In March, the same month Brody dismissed the civil rights lawsuit, the league announced an 11-year deal with TV partners worth $113 billion.
 
Didn't read all that, cuz I don't fuck with the league anyway. But it's funny that they put up a billion to address the problem, but nobody qualifes for it?
:lol: :lol: :lol:

But, it doesn't matter to the fans. Goodell could slap their grandma and niccas would still watch..talkin bout grandma was tripping.
:lol:
 
I dont watch ESPN or listen to sports radio like that but the sense I get is that they are trying to sweep this under the rug and the fans are happy to oblige...this race norming shit should be a bigger story
 
@playahaitian and then there’s this






The 40-year-old Portis, a former running back who was drafted by the Broncos in 2002 and spent the bulk of his career with Washington, faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 6.

The alleged scheme targeted the Gene Upshaw NFL Player Health Reimbursement Account Plan, which was set up in 2006 to help retired players cover medical expenses.

According to court documents, Portis caused the submission of false and fraudulent claims to the plan on his behalf over a two-month period, obtaining $99,264 in benefits for medical equipment that was not actually provided.


Portis, who earned two Pro Bowl selections during an NFL career that spanned from 2002 to 2010, and former wide receiver Tamarick Vanover, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit health care fraud on Friday, two days after their trial resulted in a hung jury. Both Portis and Vanover agreed to pay full restitution to the Upshaw Plan.

Clinton Portis, who was selected to two Pro Bowls in a career that spanned from 2002 to 2010, faces a maximum of 10 years in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit health care fraud.Mark Goldman/Icon Sportswire

The 47-year-old Vanover, who played for the Chiefs and Chargers from 1995 to 2002, obtained $159,510 in benefits for medical equipment that was not actually provided and also faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 22.

A retrial for Portis and Vanover had been scheduled to begin on Tuesday.

Former NFL linebacker Robert McCune, the third defendant in that trial who played for Washington and the Ravens from 2005 to 2008, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and health care fraud, 13 counts of health care fraud, 11 counts of wire fraud and three counts of aggravated identity theft on the second day of the trial.

According to the Justice Department, the 40-year-old McCune orchestrated the nationwide scheme, which submitted $2.9 million in fraudulent claims being submitted to the Upshaw Plan with $2.5 million being paid out. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Nov. 19 and faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison for conspiracy to commit wire fraud and health care fraud, 10 years for each count of health care fraud, 20 years for each count of wire fraud and two years for each count of aggravated identity theft.

Portis was one of 10 former NFL players charged in December 2019 with allegedly defrauding the health care program of more than $3.4 million by filing false claims for hyperbaric oxygen chambers and other expensive medical equipment.

A total of 15 people have pleaded guilty in connection with the scheme.

Reuters contributed to this report.
 
Back
Top