runners and walkers starting race
Runners and walkers headed out at the start of the second annual HeadsUp 10K/5K Trail Run & Walk that took place Oct. 25 at Shawnee Mission Park. (submitted photo)

Concussion awareness event matches last year’s effort

October 30, 2014  |  Mike Sherry  |  2 min read

An Overland Park, Kan., nonprofit raised $12,000 over the weekend to fund research into post-concussion syndrome among young athletes, according to the former Blue Valley High School basketball player who founded the nonprofit.

Kylee Bliss established the nonprofit, HeadsUp Foundation for PCS, last year, and the organization held its second annual 10K trail run and 5K walk/run on Saturday at Shawnee Mission Park in Shawnee.

Bliss said the event drew about 100 participants, about the same number as last year. The amount raised this year matched the amount raised last year, she said.

Bliss established the foundation after suffering two concussions in the span of eight weeks while playing high school basketball three years ago.

Now a freshman at the University of Kansas, Bliss still suffers from the aftereffects of the concussions: chronic headaches, dizziness, concentration lapses and visual impairment.

Bliss said the foundation expects to distribute grant funds from the run proceeds.

Organizers will start planning for next year’s run/walk soon, she said, and they will be looking for some new wrinkles to keep people coming back.

With one year under their belt, Bliss said race workers had a much smoother operation this year.

This year’s weather was much better than the cold and the wind that greeted the inaugural event.

“It’s hard to have fun when you are freezing,” Bliss said.

Tags:

Reading these stories is free, but telling them is not. Start your monthly gift now to support Flatland’s community-focused reporting.

Nick’s Picks | Messi, Jail, Buses, and More …

June 1, 2026

World Cup Team(s) Arrive It’s starting to feel real. The first World Cup team has landed in Kansas City. Defending champions Argentina touched down at KCI airport on Sunday and will begin practicing today at Sporting KC’s training facility in Wyandotte County. Much of the attention, of course, is focused on Lionel Messi. The soccer…

Related Stories

(L-R) Christina Hill and her grandmother, Lucy Wilkerson, pose for a photo with Christina’s kids, Hunter Hill Harris and Summer Hill Harris, at Lucy’s assisted living home in Grain Valley, Missouri. (Chase Castor | Flatland)

Caregiving Squeezes Households Between Young and Old 

Melissa Johnson knows her life is hardly unique. The Oak Grove, Missouri, woman cares for her infirm 72-year-old mother, who lives in her own home nearby.  She calls her mother daily. She brings dinner to her several times a week.  Johnson, who coordinates care with her aunt, a team of therapists, and a nurse, is…

Read More >
Rev. Tarris Rosell and sister Rosemary Flanigan

Feeding Tubes and Defibrillators

Let’s begin with two stories about the growing and important field of bioethics. The first is from Ryan Pferdehirt, the newly named Flanigan Chair in Bioethics at the Kansas City-based Center for Practical Bioethics. A hospital once asked him to consult on a bioethics case in which a son thought his desperately ill, hospitalized mother…

Read More >
People walk outside the Wyandotte County Public Health Department in Kansas City, Kansas. (Zane Irwin | Kansas News Service

After Tuberculosis Outbreak, Wyandotte County Parts Ways with Health Director

The director of the Wyandotte County Public Health Department is no longer with the agency, a spokesperson confirmed Tuesday. It comes after turmoil during the handling of the major tuberculosis outbreak, shown by emails obtained by the Kansas News Service. Elisha Caldwell had been head of the local health department while an outbreak of TB grew…

Read More >