Monday's health and safety news from the world of football:
- USA Today Sports reported on this year's Fritz Pollard Alliance list, which provides qualified minority candidates to the NFL for coaching vacancies. The list includes former San Francisco 49ers coach Mike Singletary.
- KXAN-TV in Austin, Texas, reported that calls the National Domestic Violence Hotline has seen its traffic increase by 84 percent since it began a multimillion partnership with the NFL two months ago.
- The Associated Press reported that Minnesota Vikings vice president of legal affairs Kevin Warren and his wife have money to the University of Minnesota Masonic Children's Hospital to establish "Carolyn's Comforts," a children's cancer emergency assistance fund.
- The Indianapolis Star featured Indianapolis punter Pat McAfee, who handed out Colts backpacks filled with books to area kids.
- The State in Columbia, South Carolina, examined No. 1 draft pick Jadeveon Clowney and his injury-riddled first NFL season.
- The Arizona Republic featured Arizona State cornerback Kweishi Brown, whose mom was his youth football coach in El Cajon, Calif.
- PBS in Nebraska reported on how the University of Nebraska put an emphasis on concussion treatment in 2014.
- The Daytona Beach News-Journal looked at one Florida high school's concussions records, which were incomplete and riddled with variations.
- The Westchester (New York) Journal News talked to a neuropsychologist wants schools to mimic other area schools and provide with athletic trainer, sideline concussion tests for athletic events.
-- Bill Bradley, contributing editor