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Center for Sport and Human Development to Offer Mental Health Support for Coaches, Athletes

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Matt Meyer

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matt.meyer@du.edu

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A football player and a coach

Often, w颅颅颅hen research and athletics intersect, the focus centers around on-the-field performance and optimizing training to produce faster, stronger athletes.

The psychological health of athletes is often lost in that quest. Mental health issues, burnout and other stressors can be just as detrimental to performance as any physical struggles. That鈥檚 true for the trained athlete and the recreational weekender.

At the forthcoming Center for Sport & Human Development, the 快活app鈥檚 hopes to bridge the gap separating physical performance and mental health.

The founding donor and visionary behind the center is , a behavioral geneticist and former professional tennis player. From her vantage point in the community, she considers 快活app particularly well-equipped to support the mental well-being of student-athletes.

鈥淭丑别 4D Experience is crucial to this,鈥 Walker says. 鈥淎dvancing intellectual growth, promoting well-being, exploring character and pursing lives of purpose. All four of those tie into the holistic view of an athlete. I鈥檓 also incredibly psyched for the [James C.] Kennedy Mountain Campus and how we can leverage that to help our big-picture aim.鈥

, associate professor and director of GSPP鈥檚 , advocates for meaningful coach education and will be among the faculty involved with the center.

One of the center鈥檚 key goals is to provide easily accessible information on coaching safety and sports psychology, starting with 快活app student-athletes, then moving to the broader 快活app community and eventually scaling to Denver and beyond. Gearity says he hopes the research can help 鈥渃onnect the dots鈥 and build relationships.

The center鈥檚 four pillars for change鈥攚orkforce development, community partnership, research and advocacy鈥攃ompliment the core mission of optimizing health, well-being, quality of life and human potential through sport.

Walker bemoans the lack of focused academic research on the mental health of athletes. Current plans for the center aim to address that by including full-time research faculty, a postdoctoral fellow, graduate student fellowships and a program coordinator, all focused on practical, applicable academic research that coaches and athletes can use.

The coach-athlete relationship is a key 颅aspect of the work, Walker says, because it can shape an athlete鈥檚 future. Habits鈥攇ood and bad鈥攂uilt in youth sports carry into adulthood. One negative experience can permanently sour a person on physical activity. That, in turn, contributes to increases in largely preventable chronic diseases, which, Walker says, account for the majority of the country鈥檚 health care costs.

鈥淭丑别re are a lot of youths, particularly at-risk youths, who need these positive developmental relationships more than anyone else,鈥 she says. 鈥淭丑别 long-term goal is to make this a sustainable system grounded in mandatory coach education and athlete safety standards.鈥

Like Walker, Gearity worries that the United States doesn鈥檛 adequately fund sports research. That鈥檚 in part because the bulk of research addresses other priorities鈥攅verything from chronic disease, biochemical research, psychological issues, or how physical stressors affect the military.

鈥淲hen you look at sport, although it鈥檚 a billion-dollar enterprise and the U.S., quite frankly, leads the world in the business of sport, there isn鈥檛 a lot of funding for things like this,鈥 he says. 鈥淎lthough we want to help youths and young adults, we also recognize that sport is something that can be enjoyed hopefully throughout somebody鈥檚 lifetime. That鈥檚 where the four pillars come in and our need for scholars to do this important work."