HEADCHECK is the digital foundation for your concussion protocol. Your protocol is the process. We're the platform. ⚡

Joined April 2014
642 Photos and videos
Myth: you'd know right away if an athlete had a concussion. Reality? Symptoms can be delayed by hours, days, even weeks, and they look different on everyone. Here's what to watch for ⬇️
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New research (Tran et at., 2026): ML models predicted concussion recovery timelines with up to 84% accuracy. Not a clinical tool yet. But a sign that the data clinicians already collect could one day help them make faster, more personalized Return to Sport decisions.
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Did you know? Once an RTP is complete, you can download a full RTP Summary PDF directly from the Athlete History tab. It’s a clean, comprehensive snapshot of the entire recovery process, ready for internal review, compliance needs, or record-keeping.
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CJFL's Prairie Football Conference President Randy O'Shaughnessy recently joined our podcast to share how using HEADCHECK has helped his teams improve concussion protocol compliance, spot trends, and better protect athletes. Listen now 🎧 na3.hubs.ly/y0vmRd0
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"I didn't want to lose playing time." A study (Bretzin et al., 2022) found that about 1 in 8 youth athletes kept a suspected concussion to themselves, and the pressure they felt mirrors what we see in high school and college athletes. Full study ➡️ na3.hubs.ly/y0tjnT0
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The @SportsNeuroSoc Concussion & Brain Health Symposium is one of our favourite weekends of the year! Find us at our booth and let's talk about how we're helping teams manage concussions the right way.
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We surveyed 17 minor hockey leaders across Canada about player safety. They were not failing. Their systems were. Here is what the data showed. 🧵
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Finding 5: The associations closing this gap did one thing differently. They stopped relying on individuals to remember and execute. They built a shared system with real-time tracking across every team. Less burden. Fewer surprises.
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One team was leading the entire country in concussions — for 4 straight years. It took league-wide data to finally find the cause. PFC President Randy O'Shaughnessy joins HEADCHECK Health Talks to tell the story. Listen now 🎧 na3.hubs.ly/y0sZ7x0
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Ice hockey isn’t just Canada’s game. It’s also the leading cause of reported concussions among boys aged 5–14. According to a Government of Canada report, hockey accounts for the highest number of sport-related brain injuries in this age group.
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Meanwhile, For girls aged 10–19, ringette accounted for the highest number of reported concussions and other TBIs. Dive into the data 📊 health-infobase.canada.ca/da…

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