
The 2026 PGA Championship is now underway in Charlotte, North Carolina. This annual event is, “known for having one of the strongest fields in golf,” according to an AI Overview. It also brings attention to the connection between golf and brain injury, as golf can be used for therapeutic means of recovery. Much like every other sport, though, playing golf can also be perilous, increasingly so in recent years, as golf becomes more physically demanding.
On the therapeutic side, golf provides exercise that can be beneficial for hand-eye coordination: bilateral coordination, fine motor grip retraining, postural balance, and visuospatial focus. The option of golf carts as an ambulation asset also provides exercise that can aid with balance deficits. Physical therapists call it, “a great training tool for the brain and the body to rehabilitate.” Programs such as Saving Strokes – launched in Sacramento more than a decade ago and now running at more than twenty sites across the western United States – use the golf swing as a neuroplasticity workout, recruiting both sides of the brain and body to rebuild balance, timing, and grip. Additionally, and just as importantly, it also allows for social engagement, which can reduce depression.

However, as with every other physical sport, golf can also be dangerous. In October 2025, the New York State Golf Association reported that approximately 5 million rounds of golf were recorded between 2020 and 2023. While the same report found that only “8 patients presented with golf-related neurological injuries to our level 1 trauma center during that same time,” even one is too many. Another study, from 2024 and available to view on PubMed, is titled, and concluded, Golf cart injuries have similar severity to all-terrain vehicle injuries in children. U.S. emergency departments treat roughly 30,000 golf-related injuries each year, with the head and neck the most commonly injured regions. A separate study reports that 156,000-plus golf cart injuries were reported between 2007 and 2017, many involving skull fractures and intracranial bleeds. In early May 2026, for example, a Utah CrossFit gym owner suffered a subdural hematoma and was placed in a medically induced coma after the golf cart she was riding in tipped over. (This accident is now driving a $500,000 GoFundMe, as the woman will face a long road of neurorehabilitation.)











