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    On the Field

    A guide to concussions as kids head back into school sports

    CultureMap Create
    Aug 9, 2018 | 11:02 am

    The start of a new school year will be here before you know it, and with it comes the beginning of fall sports (particularly football if you're in Texas).

    As parents, kids, and coaches prepare for a new academic year and sports season, the world-renowned experts at Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children recommend everyone brush up on recognizing the signs and symptoms of sports-related concussions. More importantly, be sure you know the best way to respond.

    Scottish Rite Hospital sports medicine physicians Shane M. Miller, M.D. and Jane S. Chung, M.D. discuss what to watch out for this fall.

    What is a concussion?
    A concussion is a brain injury that generally occurs from a fall or sudden blow to the head, neck, or body. Shaking of the brain inside the skull damages cells, which causes chemical changes that disrupt normal brain function.

    Signs and symptoms of a concussion
    You may suspect that your young athlete has a concussion if they appear dazed, stunned, confused, or even lose consciousness. Physical symptoms of a concussion include headache, nausea, dizziness, and blurred or double vision.

    Dr. Miller says the symptoms might worsen after several minutes, hours, or sometimes days. The athlete might feel okay at the time of the injury, but over the next few days, the injury evolves.

    When in doubt, sit them out
    One of the most common mistakes is returning a young athlete to the field too early. If a young athlete is complaining of any of the signs and symptoms of a concussion, Dr. Miller recommends that it's safest to remove them from play immediately. The "tough it out" mentality could prolong recovery and make them more susceptible to a more severe injury.

    Young brains take longer to recover than adult brains. After a head injury, the sports medicine experts at Scottish Rite Hospital can help determine if and when the young athlete is ready to return to play.

    Get a good night's sleep
    Sleep is imperative to proper development in children and teens, and not getting enough of it is associated with increased injuries and other health problems. But if your child has a concussion, good sleep may help reduce their symptom severity and decrease the length of their recovery. Dr. Chung encourages at least 9-10 hours of sleep for a pediatric patient during concussion recovery, and emphasizes improving quality sleep by limiting screen exposure for at least an hour before bed.

    How to decide if a child is ready to go back to sports
    Return to sports decisions are considered once symptoms are under control and the child is tolerating school. Evaluation of motor skills — balance, speed, coordination — and neurocognitive abilities — memory, problem-solving, reaction time, attention span — are helpful to determine readiness for sports. Returning to sports too soon is dangerous and can cause longer symptom duration or a more serious injury. When it's safe, a child is guided through a return-to-sport protocol appropriate for his or her sport.

    What parents can do
    Ask if your child's school athletic program provides athletes with pre-season baseline testing. If they do not, Scottish Rite Hospital's Center for Excellence in Sports Medicine offers computerized neurocognitive testing for athletes ages 10 and up. The results of this testing are helpful if your child sustains a concussion.

    If you witness a bad hit or observe any of the signs and symptoms listed above in your athlete or their teammates this season, say something. It takes the whole team to prevent concussions and long-term injuries.

    For more information, visit Scottish Rite Hospital's website.

    Back-to-school also means football season in Texas.

    High school football game
    Photo courtesy of Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children
    Back-to-school also means football season in Texas.
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    happy go lucky plano

    Dallas neighbor dazzles on new list of happiest cities in America

    Amber Heckler
    Mar 11, 2026 | 3:00 pm
    Plano Balloon Festival
    Photo courtesy of Visit Plano
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    A new happiness study has ranked Plano one of the happiest cities in America this year, and it once again landed on top as the happiest city in Texas.

    Plano has moved up on the list and ranks as the 16th happiest U.S. city in 2026. Last year, it was 17th.

    WalletHub determined the happiest cities in America based on 29 relevant metrics based on "positive-psychology research" across three main categories: emotional and physical wellbeing, income and employment, and community and environment. As with most WalletHub studies, it compared the 182 most populous U.S. cities.

    Fremont, California claimed the top spot as the happiest city nationwide for another year. Bismark, North Dakota and Scottsdale, Arizona, respectfully, rounded out the top three.

    Here's how WalletHub ranked Plano across the three key dimensions:

    • No. 15 – Emotional and physical wellbeing
    • No. 22 – Community and environment
    • No. 72 – Income and employment
    Plano and its residents have continued improving their city year after year, whether its through opening new bakeries and restaurants, inviting fun pop-ups for locals, or having a strong job market.
    Plano's happiness far outshines the rest of North Texas; according to WalletHub, Irving is the 70th happiest city in the country, the third-happiest in Texas, and the second-happiest city in the Dallas-Fort Worth metro. Garland ranked farther behind as No. 92 nationally, and more DFW cities ranked even lower: Grand Prairie (No. 106), Dallas (No. 111), Fort Worth (No. 113), and Arlington (No. 119).

    The report additionally found that Dallasites spend the third-most amount of time at work in the nation. The city ranked No. 180 in the national analysis of U.S. cities with the "fewest work hours."

    WalletHub also emphasized that money doesn't buy happiness — after a certain point.

    "For decades, researchers have explored the science of happiness and identified several core factors, including mental well-being, physical health, strong social ties, job satisfaction, and financial stability," the report said. "Still, income has its limits — studies show that earning more than $75,000 a year does not lead to greater happiness."

    Six-figure earners in Plano aren't necessarily as happy as those who don't make as much, as a separate financial study from SmartAsset revealed these big earners are only taking home about $72,653 after taxes and adjusted for the cost of living.

    This is how other Texas cities ranked in the report:

    • No. 39 – Austin
    • No. 128 – Houston
    • No. 135 – Lubbock
    • No. 137 – El Paso
    • No. 140 – Laredo
    • No. 143 – Amarillo
    • No. 150 – Brownsville
    • No. 154 – San Antonio
    • No. 155 – Corpus Christi
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