CTE was first described in 1928 when Dr. Harrison Martland, a New Jersey medical examiner began to note a constellation of symptoms in boxers. In 2015, UCLA college received 1078 of 1500 surveys sent to high school and collegiate certified athletic trainers at the beginning of three football seasons. Which is a measly 72 percent of the 77,616 football players represented. They concluded that 3880 students, which is 5 percent, sustained at least one concussion, and 542 students, which is 14 percent of the of the 3880 sustained a second injury during the same season. Players who sustained one concussion in a season were three times more likely to sustain a second concussion in the same season compared with uninjured players. Concussions and chronic traumatic encephalopathy are serious conditions that have to be taken seriously in order to help prevent serious health disorders later in life for millions of people. Addressing the seriousness of Concussions and Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy could help solve, and or prevent the issue at hand with head