Have you ever obtained a medical certificate for sick days?? There are doctors out there who will state whatever you want them to state if it suits them. Now in this day and age i agree that it would be more unlikely that a doctor would bc the litigation would be enormous down the track but if that player went with a 1st aid report from the club (mandatory) stating that the player was suffering from signs / symptoms that aligned with concussion then it would be incredibly unlikely the player gets the okay to play. Once he's told this it is up to the club to ensure he doesn't for 2 games. If they can't / won't do this then any ramifications they receive should be on them.Not sure that example is that straight forward any more SMY. It goes beyond 1st aid who just identify and refer. It’s the decision to play the following week by the club. As you’ve now moved the discussion to who has liability then consider this:
For starters, I highly doubt that any doctor fudges their diagnosis and can’t produce meticulous records, if ever called upon, to support that their analysis was on all the information they were provided by the patient. I dare say they’re not covered by their insurance for dodgy diagnosis and have serious disciplinary consequences if they did. So I doubt they submit as easily as you suggest. Suddenly there is the requirement to produce the 1st aid analysis report.
Secondly you argued a few comments back how super serious all this was for player welfare as priority. So if that player does have those further serious issues as you outlined and that prevents their work and livelihood then they surely chase someone for money. If the doctor is squeaky clean, then they’ll come knocking at the club.
They potentially engage a lawyer who gets some eyewitnesses to say that the player had obvious symptoms in the preceding game (friends will sign to ensure he gets $) and potentially he even states that he was sent by the club volunteer to get the doctors clearance even though he had all the symptoms. Not sure that looks good on the club.
The lawyer identifies Marsh/JLT for public liability as the cash cow. Not sure you’d want to be that club volunteer being interviewed by insurance claim assessor on what occurred and that prevented the Marsh/JLT payment.
Either this is the super serious issue that you said earlier, or it’s not.
As for the decision to play the following week, I might be on an island here but if a player was Ko'd on the weekend and decided he was alright to play and had received a medical certificate stating he could, and I was coaching that side and saw the player during the game / after the game - not a hope in hell. Nothing to do with potentially being sued down the track but just player welfare.
Seriously think you are underestimating people's thought processes around this issue in todays world. It is the single biggest issue in the code - by a fair way.





