Dr Brian Hainline
Brian Hainline, MD, is a neurologist who specializes in pain medicine and sports neurology. In addition to his clinical duties, he has assumed many roles in sport for the past 35 years, including setting the foundation for drug testing in sports through his groundbreaking book Drugs and the Athlete; working as ringside physician in boxing; and serving as Chief Medical Officer of the US Open Tennis Championships for 16 years. Brian has been an active voice in presenting sport as a public good: he was the NCAA’s first Chief Medical Officer from 2013 through May 2024. In this role, he reshaped the professional and amateur National Governing Body approach to sport, building a collaborative network that included sports medicine and scientific organizations, NCAA member schools, and the US Department of Defense. He is a leading international voice in both pain medicine and mental health in sport and co-chaired the International Olympic Committee summits that addressed these issues. Brian is a member of the Concussion in Sport Group and is coauthor of the 6th International Consensus Statement on Concussion in Sport. He is author/co-author of over 100 academic papers and book chapters, and co- editor of Sports Neurology – a comprehensive textbook that describes the interplay between sport and the nervous system. He is Clinical Professor of Neurology at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. Brian is Immediate Past President of the US Tennis Association, and Vice President of the International Tennis Federation.