Study Points to Health Disparities Among Former NFL Players
Black, other nonwhite athletes report more pain, physical impairment, mood disorders and cognitive problems than white peers
At a glance:
- In a study of former NFL players, Black, Hawaiian, and athletes from other racial backgrounds report worse physical, mental health outcomes than white players.
- The widest health gaps emerged between Black and white former NFL players.
- Black former players reported worse health outcomes in all five health categories, compared with their white peers.
- Presence of health disparities among former NLF players reflects the deep and pervasive nature of systemic inequities that persist even among elite athletes.
A career in professional football may yield an array of health benefits that extend beyond playing years: NFL players engage in vigorous training, tend to be more educated than other men in the U.S., and have higher median incomes than most fellow Americans—all factors associated with better overall health.
But new research from Harvard Medical School and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health suggests that even these advantages may not be enough to neutralize persistent gaps in health outcomes among Black, white, and players of other racial backgrounds.
The analysis, based on self-reports among former NFL players, found that Black players were significantly more likely than white players to experience diminished quality of life due to impaired physical function, pain, cognitive troubles, depression, and anxiety. In four of five health outcomes, the gaps were greatest between Black and white former players.
The findings, published Aug. 4 in Annals of Epidemiology, are based on a survey of 3,794 former NFL players, ages 24 to 89, conducted as part of the ongoing Football Players Health Study at Harvard University, a research initiative that encompasses a constellation of studies designed to evaluate various aspects of players’ health across the lifespan.
The researchers categorized former players into three groups based on self-identified race: Black (1,423), white (2,215) and Hawaiian and other races (109)—a group that included American Indian/Alaskan Native, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, and Asian, among others. The researchers then compared self-reported symptoms in five categories: physical functioning, pain, cognitive function, depression and anxiety.
The analysis showed that Black former NFL players were 50% more likely than white former players to have pain that interfered with daily activities, as well as depression and anxiety. Black former players were 36% more likely to have cognitive symptoms—including memory deficits and attention problems—that impacted their quality of life. Black former players were also nearly 90% more likely to report impaired physical functioning, compared with their white peers.
The study found that other nonwhite players, including Native Hawaiians, had a higher risk for all categories of adverse health outcomes, except impaired physical functioning.
“Our analysis points to persistent and dramatic gaps in health outcomes among former NFL players that are particularly pronounced among Black athletes and also present among other Hawaiians, Native Americans, and Asian players,” said study lead author Andrea Roberts, senior research scientist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
“Our findings underscore the urgent need to develop public health interventions and policies that address underlying systemic factors that give rise to such disparities both among former athletes and in the general population,” Roberts added.
To examine the role of other factors that may affect health outcomes, the researchers also looked at number of seasons played in the NFL, position played, concussion symptoms, surgeries, body-mass index, use of performance-enhancing drugs, lifestyle habits including drinking and smoking, as well as pain medication use. The differences persisted even when the researchers accounted for the possible influence of these factors.
Next, the researchers examined whether differences in health varied by a player’s age, as a surrogate marker for diversity and equity in the era that they played in. Although younger nonwhite players were in the NFL during a period marked by greater diversity and greater equity, their risk for adverse health outcomes remained the same as that of older players.
The researchers suggested that factors such as discrimination prior to, during, or following a player’s time in the NFL could account for the disparities. Systemic and structural racism has been linked with worse mental and physical health and higher mortality. Additionally, past research indicates that nonwhites are more likely to receive lower quality healthcare than whites.
“We tend to think that elite athletes may be shielded from health inequities, but our findings counter that notion and reveal important differences in quality of life among former athletes,” said study senior author Marc Weisskopf, professor of environmental epidemiology and physiology at the Harvard Chan School. “These gaps echo well-documented health disparities in the general population and demand both short-term interventions and long-term solutions.”
“As we begin to unpack the complexities around these health disparities between white and nonwhite players, we can begin to see the confluence of challenges that extend beyond the socioeconomic benefits of playing in the NFL,” said study co-author Herman Taylor, a co-investigator of the Football Players Health Study and director of the Cardiovascular Research Institute at the Morehouse School of Medicine. “Meaningful solutions to systemic inequities that fuel health disparities will not emerge overnight. In the meantime, we urge players to consult their physicians about the health concerns we’ve outlined in this study that might impact their quality of life.”
The research was funded by the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA).
Other investigators on the study included Alicia Whittington, Frank Speizer, Aaron Baggish, Ross Zafonte and Alvaro Pascual-Leone.
Relevant disclosures:
The authors of the study are or were either partly or fully supported by the Football Players Health Study at Harvard University, which is in turn sponsored by the NFL Players Association. The NFLPA had no role in the design and conduct of the study; in the collection, management, analysis and interpretation of the data; in the preparation, review or approval of the manuscript or in the decision to submit the manuscript for publication.
Aaron Baggish has received funding the American Heart Association, the American Society of Echocardiography, and receives compensation for his role as team cardiologist from U.S. Soccer, U.S. Rowing, the New England Patriots, the Boston Bruins, the New England Revolution, and Harvard University. He also serves on the editorial board for the journal Circulation, and serves as an associate editor for Medicine Science Sports & Exercise.
Ross Zafonte received royalties from Oakstone for authorship of an educational CD; Demos Publishing for serving as co-editor of the text “Brain Injury Medicine.” Zafonte serves on the Scientific Advisory Board of Myomo, Oxeia Biopharma, ElMINDA and Biodirection. He also evaluates patients in the MGH Brain and Body-TRUST Program, which is funded by the NFL Players Association.