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  • Priorities for Investment in Injury Prevention in Community Australian Football

    Author(s)
    Finch, Caroline F
    Gabbe, Belinda
    White, Peta
    Lloyd, David
    Twomey, Dara
    Donaldson, Alex
    Elliott, Bruce
    Cook, Jill
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Lloyd, David
    Year published
    2013
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Objective: High-quality sport-specific information about the nature, type, cause, and frequency of injuries is needed to set injury prevention priorities. This article describes the type, nature, and mechanism of injuries in community Australian Football (community AF) players, as collected through field-based monitoring of injury in teams of players. Data Sources: Compilation of published prospectively collected injury data from 3 studies in junior community AF (1202 injuries in 1950+ players) and 3 studies in adult community AF (1765 injuries in 2265 players). This was supplemented with previously unpublished data from ...
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    Objective: High-quality sport-specific information about the nature, type, cause, and frequency of injuries is needed to set injury prevention priorities. This article describes the type, nature, and mechanism of injuries in community Australian Football (community AF) players, as collected through field-based monitoring of injury in teams of players. Data Sources: Compilation of published prospectively collected injury data from 3 studies in junior community AF (1202 injuries in 1950+ players) and 3 studies in adult community AF (1765 injuries in 2265 players). This was supplemented with previously unpublished data from the most recent adult community AF injury cohort study conducted in 2007 to 2008. Injuries were ranked according to most common body regions, nature of injury, and mechanism. Main Results: In all players, lower limb injuries were the most frequent injury in community AF and were generally muscle strains, joint sprains, and superficial injuries. These injuries most commonly resulted from incidental contact with other players, or from "overexertion." Upper limb injuries were less common but included fractures, strains, and sprains that were generally caused by incidental contact between players and the result of players falling to the ground. Conclusions: Lower limb injuries are common in community AF and could have an adverse impact on sustained participation in the game. Based on what is known about their mechanisms, it is likely that a high proportion of lower limb injuries could be prevented and they should therefore be a priority for injury prevention in community AF.
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    Journal Title
    Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine
    Volume
    23
    Issue
    6
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1097/JSM.0b013e31829aa3e8
    Subject
    Clinical sciences
    Sports science and exercise
    Sports medicine
    Medical physiology
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/58574
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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