Madison, News, RSS Facebook, RSS General, RSS Twitter
 By  GreggParker Published 
9:44 pm Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Library’s first health initiative installment to focus on sports medicine

MADISON – Sports medicine will be the topic for the first installment of the Huntsville Hospital Community Health Initiative at Madison Public Library.

Michael Stevenson (CONTRIBUTED)

Michael Stevenson (CONTRIBUTED)

Michael Stevenson, program manager for Huntsville Hospital Sports Center, will speak on Sept. 23 at 6:30 p.m.

Steven’s overview will show athletic training as a profession and the sports medicine team as a whole. He will review common injuries like sprains and strains, tips and strategies for treating injuries and player safety in professional leagues, along with a question-and-answer time.

The session will target parents and youth athletes for competing in a safer environment.

“The Sports Center department has a staff of athletic trainers (board-certified medical professionals) who we provide to our partner schools at no cost. Athletic trainers attend practices and games and can facilitate health care when an injury arises,” along with helping prevent injury, Stevenson said.

With The Orthopedic Center, Stevenson’s department “provides a chain of care unmatched in the area. From start to finish, our athletic trainers can take the athlete from injury to returning to play,” he said.

The hospital’s wellness centers can provide “some one-on-one personal training, all the way to physical therapy, surgery, imaging, emergency room visits — all under one umbrella,” he said.

Communication about the athlete or patient’s status is important. “It truly is a team approach, with the athletic trainer being the first and last line of defense,” Stevenson said.

Huntsville Hospital Sports Center is the exclusive sports medicine provider for Madison City Schools.

Branch manager Sarah Sledge wrote the 12-month health initiative grant, awarded to the Huntsville Library Foundation for the Madison library. “Each month the Madison library will provide a public seminar by authoritative health professionals,” librarian Teresa Allison.

Topics will include nutrition, pediatrics and parenting, breast cancer and women’s health, senior health and stroke, substance abuse, Black History Month, stroke, special needs issues, mental health, cancer and teen health. The sessions will “connect library patrons with the Madison medical community and local health agencies,” Allison said.

 

Also on The Madison Record
Self-defense and taekwondo classes at Madison Senior Center
Living50Plus
Gregg Parker | Photos courtesy of the Madison Senior Center 
June 18, 2026
Starting in June, Madison Senior Center members can enroll in two new classes to strengthen body and mind: self-defense and taekwondo. On Mondays, mem...
How to remain physically and mentally active
Living50Plus
Metro News 
June 18, 2026
Growing older is often equated with slowing down. Aging may be characterized as a period of decline marked by an inability to do the things you once d...
Eric Terrell selected to serve as interim MCS superintendent
Madison County Record, News, Schools, ...
By STAFF REPORTS 
June 17, 2026
MADISON - Eric Terrell was named interim superintendent Tuesday by the Madison City Board of Education to replace Dr. Ed Nichols when Nichols retires ...
Edgewater HOA reverses previous action regarding goose management
Madison County Record, News, The Madison Recor, ...
By STAFF REPORTS 
June 17, 2026
MADISON - Controversy has surrounded the method a local neighborhood had decided to deal with their large population of geese, but a resolution to the...
Dr. Ed Nichols honored with city coin ahead of retirement
A: Main, Madison County Record, News, ...
Two longtime city employees also honored
Maria Rakoczy 
June 17, 2026
MADISON - Madison City Schools Superintendent Dr. Ed Nichols was presented with a framed city of Madison coin at last week’s Madison City Council meet...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *