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Parents launch nonprofit to educate about heatstroke dangers

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Parents launch non-profit to educate about heat stroke dangers
Baltimore Sun/Tribune News Service via Getty Images, FILE
ByAdisa Hargett-Robinson
September 01, 2022, 7:10 PM

Two parents who have turned tragedy into a teachable moment are educating others on the dangers of heatstroke.

Martin McNair and Tonya Wilson lost their 19-year-old son, Jordan McNair, in 2018 after the University of Maryland football player suffered a heatstroke following a strenuous football workout. Now, the foundation named for their son is helping others avoid the same fate.

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Jordan McNair
Courtesy The Jordan McNair Foundation

Heatstroke occurs when the body overheats, with internal temperature rising to 104 degrees and is most likely to happen during the summer months, according to the Mayo Clinic. Older adults, people who are overweight as well as people who experience overexertion from exercise are most likely to suffer heatstroke.

“Jordan was very healthy, as far as for his weight and height, he was healthy…we were totally oblivious to what a heat-related injury was. We didn't know what was going on,” Jordan McNair’s father, Martin McNair, told ABC News.

After Jordan's death, his parents launched the Jordan McNair Foundation to raise awareness about heatstroke and teach parents what to look for.

“I think for us also, especially for me, my grief went into the work that we've done and we're still amazed that, you know, the accomplishments and the impact that we've made up until this point,” McNair told ABC News.

Marty and Tonya speaking to parents about heat stroke.
Courtesy The Jordan McNair Foundation

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The foundation was established in June 2018, days after Jordan died, and, since then, has started working with student athletes of all ages. The foundation's work recently expanded to the collegiate level, partnering with Morgan University in Maryland.

Marty and Jordan McNair.
Courtesy The Jordan McNair Foundation

“We talk to schools, literally all over the nation, but our main focus is parent education, and that's really the main thing. Advocacy and the seeds of advocacy need to be planted at a very, very early age, so our goal is to educate parents all over the nation, along with student athletes and the more educated a parent is, the more educated the student athlete is and the more educated coaches are, because parents are asking the right questions at this point,” McNair says.

Questions they wish they knew to ask in 2018.

Tonya and Marty McNair with kids at TJMF Sports Clinic.
Courtesy The Jordan McNair Foundation

“I wouldn't wish this type of pain on nobody, and even though it's been four years, it's still felt like yesterday.”

“I didn't prepare him for what I didn't know. Even though I try not to beat myself up about it, but I constantly did because it was like, 'I could have prepared him more.' I taught him how to be a leader, you know? How to defend himself. How to do this, how to do that; not to use drugs or substances and things like that. But at the end of the day, I never really taught him to, If you feel uncomfortable doing something, don't do it,” McNair tells ABC News.

Runningback Marion Barber #24 of the Dallas Cowboys rushes the football during the NFL game against the Arizona Cardinals at the University of Phoenix Stadium on Dec. 25, 2010 in Glendale, Arizona.
Christian Petersen/Getty Images, FILE

While McNair died in 2018, heatstroke is still an issue for athletes at all levels and even tragically claimed the life of former Dallas Cowboys running back Marion Barber III in June. In July, police in the Dallas suburb of Frisco, where Barber lived, said in a statement that Barber died of heatstroke and that his death was ruled an accident.

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MORE:Former Dallas Cowboys star Marion Barber III died from heat stroke: Medical examiner

Heat illness often advances quickly in both football players and runners, according to the Gatorade Sports Science Institute. Since 1995, on average three athletes a year have died of heatstroke.

With record-high temperatures across the country, everyone -- even non-athletes -- is at an increased risk. However, with the record-high temperatures and outdoor practices for fall sports, heatstroke has an increased risk in athletes but is often confused with heath exhaustion, McNair said.

An offensive lineman of the UCF Knights sprays himself to cool off from the heat during the UCF Spring Game at the Bounce House on April 16, 2022 in Orlando, Fla.
Alex Menendez/Getty Images, FILE

“When you're looking at heatstroke, the big difference is in the central nervous dysfunction. So what does that mean in layman's terms? Basically, when people start showing altered mental status, they could be ranting hysterically, which is not their normal selves. That's a sign of heatstroke. And all of the signs look different. But again, it's not the normal behavior of the student athlete or the person having a heatstroke. That's what the sign, that's what those are telltale signs like, hey, this person, this person is usually a quiet person and now they are going on a rant,” McNair says.

Irrational behavior is one of the symptoms of heatstroke, according to the Mayo Clinic. Other symptoms could include high fever, dry, hot skin, shallow breathing, seizures and weak pulse.

According to the Mayo Clinic, it's best to wear loose fitting clothing, drink lots of liquids to stay hydrated and to do strenuous activity during cooler parts of the day to prevent heatstroke.

McNair and Wilson hope to prevent other parents from suffering the same fate as them, and plan to have their foundation expand across the country.

Jordan and Tonya McNair.
Courtesy The Jordan McNair Foundation

“He was a gentleman. Everybody loved Jordan. And all he had to do was smile and every, any place he went he would just light up a room…He was the jokester. He just played a bunch of jokes and so on. Outside of the home, he was different, but inside the home he was a lovable guy, and some days we’d just be in the house, and be eating more than talking but just a gentle giant. That's exactly what he was, a gentle giant, and he's missed tremendously,” Tonya Wilson, Jordan’s mother, told ABC News.

ABC News' Victor Barroco Contributed to this report

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