The Red Sox cause heartburn — but do they save lives

It’s going to be an agonizing/wonderful/intense final weekend of Major League Baseball’s regular season. Whenever Major League Baseball has to post this kind of web page to explain the possible playoff permutations (link via David Pinto), you know there are some close races. Naturally, the piece de resistance is the AL East, with the streaking ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

It's going to be an agonizing/wonderful/intense final weekend of Major League Baseball's regular season. Whenever Major League Baseball has to post this kind of web page to explain the possible playoff permutations (link via David Pinto), you know there are some close races. Naturally, the piece de resistance is the AL East, with the streaking Yankees a game ahead of the Red Sox, who are tied with Cleveland in the wild card standings. I don't know how these games could top the drama of the last two years with these two teams -- but then again, I thought that was true right before last year's ALCS, and look what happened. Intriguingly, the close series probably means an easier load for Boston's emergency rooms:

It’s going to be an agonizing/wonderful/intense final weekend of Major League Baseball’s regular season. Whenever Major League Baseball has to post this kind of web page to explain the possible playoff permutations (link via David Pinto), you know there are some close races. Naturally, the piece de resistance is the AL East, with the streaking Yankees a game ahead of the Red Sox, who are tied with Cleveland in the wild card standings. I don’t know how these games could top the drama of the last two years with these two teams — but then again, I thought that was true right before last year’s ALCS, and look what happened. Intriguingly, the close series probably means an easier load for Boston’s emergency rooms:

A couple of dyed-in-the-red-wool Fenway fanatics — who, by day, specialize in analyzing trends in health-care use — wondered what happens to emergency room traffic when the Sox catapult into the playoffs. The result of their research: Last fall, while the Sox pummelled the Yankees in the deciding game of the league championship and, then, the Cardinals in Game Four of the World Series, business in the ER was as cold as Manny Ramirez’s bat was hot. ”We knew if we were looking for any public event that would have an effect on health-care utilization, it would have to be the Red Sox championship games,” said Ben Reis, inveterate Sox fan and Children’s Hospital Boston researcher…. The researchers discovered that during the championship games, televisions were blaring in three of every five households in the Boston area, watching Curt, Johnny, and the rest of the self-proclaimed Idiots. At the same time, visits to the emergency rooms plummeted, on average, by 15 percent when compared to historical trends for ER visits on autumn evenings.

Fewer ER visits and more babies — you know the recent Red Sox revival has been good for New England. [Sure, there are fewer visits, but do the Red Sox save lives?–ed. The reportage is unclear. On the one hand, it seems that people with chronic ailments might defer or postpone visits. On the other hand, “There was no evidence, the researchers from Children’s report, of a surge in ER visits immediately after the game concluded.” One has to wonder if there were fewer driving accidents, etc. while people were watching the games.]

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

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