Iowa Code
Chapter 280 - UNIFORM SCHOOL REQUIREMENTS
Section 280.13C - Concussion and brain injury policies.

280.13C Concussion and brain injury policies.
1. Legislative findings. The general assembly finds and declares all of the following:
a. Concussions are one of the most commonly reported injuries in children and adolescents who participate in sports and recreational activities. A concussion is caused by a blow or motion to the head or body that causes the brain to move rapidly inside the skull. The risk of catastrophic injuries or death is significant when a concussion or head injury is not properly evaluated and managed.
b. Concussions are a type of brain injury that can range from mild to severe and can disrupt the way the brain normally works. Concussions can occur in any organized or unorganized sport or recreational activity and can result from a fall or from players colliding with each other, the ground, or with obstacles. Concussions can occur with or without loss of consciousness, but the vast majority of concussions occur without loss of consciousness.
c. Continuing to play with a concussion or symptoms of a brain injury leaves a young athlete especially vulnerable to greater injury and even death. The general assembly recognizes that, despite having generally recognized return-to-play standards for concussions and head injuries, some affected youth athletes are prematurely returned to play or expected to learn at full capability, resulting in prolonged symptoms, actual or potential physical injury, or death to youth athletes in this state.
d. A concussion can impair not only the physical abilities of a student athlete, but can also affect how a student athlete thinks, acts, feels, and learns. A student athlete who has sustained a concussion may need informal or formal adjustments, accommodations, modifications of curriculum, and monitoring by medical or educational staff until the student is fully recovered.
2. Definitions. For the purposes of this section:
a. “Contest” means an interscholastic athletic game or competition.
b. “Contest official” means a referee, umpire, judge, or other official in an athletic contest who is registered with the Iowa high school athletic association or the Iowa girls high school athletic union.
c. “Emergency medical care provider” means the same as defined in section 147A.1.
d. “Extracurricular interscholastic activity” means any dance or cheerleading activity or extracurricular interscholastic activity, contest, or practice governed by the Iowa high school athletic association or the Iowa girls high school athletic union that is a contact or limited contact activity as identified by the American academy of pediatrics.
e. “Licensed health care provider” means a physician, physician assistant, chiropractor, advanced registered nurse practitioner, nurse, physical therapist, occupational therapist, or athletic trainer licensed by a board designated under section 147.13.
3. Training.
a. The department of public health, Iowa high school athletic association, and the Iowa girls high school athletic union shall work together to develop training materials and courses regarding concussions and brain injuries, including training regarding evaluation, prevention, symptoms, risks, and long-term effects of concussions and brain injuries. Each coach or contest official shall complete such training at least every two years.
b. Individuals required to complete training pursuant to this subsection shall submit proof of such completion to the Iowa high school athletic association or the Iowa girls high school athletic union, as applicable.
4. Guidelines and information sheet.
a. The department of public health, Iowa high school athletic association, and the Iowa girls high school athletic union shall work together to distribute the guidelines of the centers for disease control and prevention of the United States department of health and human services and other pertinent information to inform and educate coaches, students, and the parents and guardians of students of the risks, signs, symptoms, and behaviors consistent with a concussion or brain injury, including the danger of continuing to participate in extracurricular interscholastic activities after suffering a concussion or brain injury and their responsibility to report such signs, symptoms, and behaviors if they occur.
b. For school years beginning on or after July 1, 2018, each school district and nonpublic school shall provide to the parent or guardian of each student in grades seven through twelve a concussion and brain injury information sheet, as provided by the department of public health, the Iowa high school athletic association, and the Iowa girls high school athletic union. The student and the student’s parent or guardian shall sign and return a copy of the concussion and brain injury information sheet to the student’s school prior to the student’s participation in any extracurricular interscholastic activity.
5. Removal from participation.
a. If a student’s coach, contest official, or licensed health care provider or an emergency medical care provider observes signs, symptoms, or behaviors consistent with a concussion or brain injury in an extracurricular interscholastic activity, the student shall be immediately removed from participation.
b. A student who has been removed from participation shall not recommence such participation or participate in any dance or cheerleading activity or activity, contest, or practice governed by the Iowa high school athletic association or the Iowa girls high school athletic union until the student has been evaluated by a licensed health care provider trained in the evaluation and management of concussions and other brain injuries and the student has received written clearance to return to or commence participation from a licensed health care provider.
6. Return-to-play protocol and return-to-learn plans.
a. The department of public health, in cooperation with the Iowa high school athletic association and the Iowa girls high school athletic union, shall develop a return-to-play protocol based on peer-reviewed scientific evidence consistent with the guidelines of the centers for disease control and prevention of the United States department of health and human services, for a student’s return to participation in any extracurricular interscholastic activity after showing signs, symptoms, or behaviors consistent with a concussion or brain injury. The department of public health shall adopt the return-to-play protocol by rule pursuant to chapter 17A. The board of directors of each school district and the authorities in charge of each accredited nonpublic school with enrolled students who participate in an extracurricular interscholastic activity which is a contest in grades seven through twelve shall adopt such protocol by July 1, 2019.
b. Personnel of a school district or accredited nonpublic school with enrolled students who participate in an extracurricular interscholastic activity which is a contest in grades seven through twelve shall develop a return-to-learn plan based on guidance developed by the brain injury association of America in cooperation with a student removed from participation in an extracurricular interscholastic activity and diagnosed with a concussion or brain injury, the student’s parent or guardian, and the student’s licensed health care provider to accommodate the student as the student returns to the classroom.
7. Protective gear. For school budget years beginning on or after July 1, 2018, the board of directors of each school district and the authorities in charge of each accredited nonpublic school with enrolled students who participate in an extracurricular interscholastic activity which is a contest in grades seven through twelve shall provide students participating in such contests with any protective gear, including but not limited to helmets and pads required for the activity by law, by the rules for such contests, or by Iowa high school athletic association or Iowa girls high school athletic union guidelines. However, an individual student is responsible for other protective gear that the individual student needs but that is not required for participation in the contest as provided in this subsection.
8. Liability.
a. A school district or accredited nonpublic school that adopts and follows the protocol required by this section and provides an emergency medical care provider or a licensed health care provider at a contest that is a contact or limited contact activity as identified by the American academy of pediatrics shall not be liable for any claim for injuries or damages based upon the actions or inactions of the emergency medical care provider or the licensed health care provider present at the contest at the request of the school district or accredited nonpublic school so long as the emergency medical care provider or the licensed health care provider acts reasonably and in good faith and in the best interest of the student athlete and without undue influence of the school district or accredited nonpublic school or coaching staff employed by the school district or accredited nonpublic school. A school district or accredited nonpublic school shall not be liable for any claim for injuries or damages if an emergency medical care provider or a licensed health care provider who was scheduled in accordance with a prearranged agreement with the school district or accredited nonpublic school to be present and available at a contest is not able to be present and available due to documentable, unforeseen circumstances and the school district or accredited nonpublic school otherwise followed the protocol.
b. An emergency medical care provider or a licensed health care provider providing care without compensation for a school district or accredited nonpublic school under this section shall not be liable for any claim for injuries or damages arising out of such care so long as the emergency medical care provider or the licensed health care provider acts reasonably and in good faith and in the best interest of the student athlete and without undue influence of the school district or accredited nonpublic school or coaching staff employed by the school district or accredited nonpublic school.
2011 Acts, ch 32, §1; 2012 Acts, ch 1023, §40; 2018 Acts, ch 1131, §1, 3; 2018 Acts, ch 1172, §25, 26; 2021 Acts, ch 54, §1
Subsection 2, paragraph e amended

Structure Iowa Code

Iowa Code

Title VII - EDUCATION AND CULTURAL AFFAIRS

Chapter 280 - UNIFORM SCHOOL REQUIREMENTS

Section 280.1 - Title.

Section 280.2 - Definitions.

Section 280.3 - Educational program — attendance center requirements.

Section 280.3A - Accredited nonpublic school child care programs.

Section 280.4 - Limited English proficiency — weighting.

Section 280.5 - Display of United States flag and Iowa state flag — pledge of allegiance.

Section 280.6 - Religious books.

Section 280.7 - Dental clinics.

Section 280.7A - Student eye care.

Section 280.8 - Special education.

Section 280.9 - Career education.

Section 280.9A - History and government required — voter registration.

Section 280.9B - Violence prevention curriculum.

Section 280.10 - Eye-protective devices.

Section 280.11 - Ear-protective devices.

Section 280.12 - School improvement advisory committee.

Section 280.13 - Requirements for interscholastic athletic contests and competitions.

Section 280.13A - Sharing interscholastic activities.

Section 280.13B - Recording and broadcast fees restricted.

Section 280.13C - Concussion and brain injury policies.

Section 280.14 - School requirements — administration.

Section 280.15 - Joint employment and sharing.

Section 280.16 - Self-administration of asthma or other airway constricting disease medication or epinephrine auto-injectors.

Section 280.16A - Epinephrine auto-injector supply.

Section 280.17 - Procedures for handling child abuse reports.

Section 280.17A - Procedures for handling dangerous weapons.

Section 280.17B - Students suspended or expelled for possession of dangerous weapons.

Section 280.18 - Student achievement goals.

Section 280.19 - Plans for at-risk children.

Section 280.19A - Alternative options education programs — disclosure of records.

Section 280.20 - Career and technical agriculture education.

Section 280.21 - Corporal punishment — burden of proof.

Section 280.21A - Leave — episode of violence.

Section 280.21B - Expulsion — weapons in school.

Section 280.22 - Student exercise of free expression.

Section 280.23 - Student health services.

Section 280.24 - Procedures for reporting drug or alcohol possession or use.

Section 280.25 - Information sharing — interagency agreements.

Section 280.26 - Intervention in altercations.

Section 280.27 - Reporting violence — immunity.

Section 280.28 - Harassment and bullying prohibited — policy — immunity.

Section 280.29 - Enrollment of children adjudicated or in foster care — transfer of educational records — services.

Section 280.30 - High-quality school building emergency operations plans.

Section 280.31 - Facial coverings.