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40th Annual Meeting Southeast Chapter of the American College of Sports Medicine (SEACSM). Injury Prevention in Youth Sports: What Works, What Doesn’t and What’s Next February 10, 2012. Alex B. Diamond, D.O., M.P.H. Assistant Professor of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation
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40th Annual Meeting Southeast Chapter of the American College of Sports Medicine (SEACSM) Injury Prevention in Youth Sports: What Works, What Doesn’t and What’s NextFebruary 10, 2012 Alex B. Diamond, D.O., M.P.H. Assistant Professor of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Vanderbilt University Medical Center Co-Chair, Youth Sports Safety Taskforce Team Physician Vanderbilt & Belmont Universities Nashville Sounds & Nashville Predators
Disclosures • NO commercial relationships • Research & Educational funding • NIH U54 Institutional Clinical & Translational Science Award
Objectives Review basic principles of injury prevention Introduce key youth sports safety topics Discuss strategies to prevent injuries in young athletes Empower you to create a safer sporting environment and culture for youth athletes
Courtesy: Safe Kids USA & AOSSM Youth Sports: What We Know The Facts… • More than 38 million children and adolescents participate in organized sports in the U.S. each year. • Another 10 million in some form of athletics • Estimated 3.5 million children under age 14 receive medical treatment for a sports-related injury each year. • HS athletes account for additional 2 million injuries / 500,000 doctor visits / 30,000 hospitalization
ER Data: Sports & Recreation • Leading cause of presentation for injury among adolescents • Emery CA. Epi Ped Sport Injur, 2005. • CDC data (Gilchrist J et al. MMWR, 2007.) • 2.4 million visits/yr (age 5-18) • 29% of all unintentional injury visits • 48% of injuries that require hospitalization or transfer involve age 5-18 • NSW population health survey showed only 8.9% of sports injuries treated in hospital setting. • Mitchell R. J Sci Med Sport, 2010.
By the Numbers AOSSM 2009 Annual Meeting Pre-Conference Program. • Injury reported during sport among athletes age 5-14 • 28% of football players • 25% of baseball players • 22% of soccer players • 15% of basketball players • 12% of softball players • Canadian study = more than 1 in 3 adolescents seek medical attention from a sport injury every year • Emery CA. CJSM, 2006.
Public Health Relevance:Sports Matter for (and to) Kids • Physical activity effects morbidity & mortality • Physical activity patterns track from childhood adolesc adulthood • Injury is potential barrier to physical activity • 8% of adolescents drop out of sporting activities/yr due to injury • Grimmer KA et al. J Adolesc Health, 2000. • Leading risk for OA development • Injury Cost Model of the U.S. CPSC (2003) • $588 million in direct expenses and $6.6 billion in indirect expenses from injuries in the top five female and male HS sports
Public Health Relevance:We Can Make a Difference • Injury often predictable and preventable, not just “accidents” • As many as half the injuries sustained by youth while playing sports are likely preventable
Emery CA et al. CJSM, 2006. Safety cannot be delegated, it is a shared responsibility of… • Parents • Coaches • Youth athletes • Safety advocates • Athletic trainers • Schools • Health professionals
Prevention Responsibility & Child Development • Perceptual & cognitive status • Identify fewer hazards and do so more slowly • Age ≤ 10 (pedestrian data) • Overestimate physical abilities • Lack of understanding for consequences • Sense of invulnerability • Low level perceived risk + over-estimation ability = signif injury risk increase (age 11-14 OR 3.77-7.92) • Kontos AP. J Ped Psych, 2004.
Approaches To Prevention Clinical Care Research
Klugl M et al. CJSM, 2010. Sport Injury Prevention Literature Status • ~ 12,000 published articles on sports injury prevention since 1938 • < 50% of the 12K were original research • Most were incidence & etiology studies • Only 492 actually evaluated efficacy or effectiveness of interventions to prevent injury • Regulatory change rarely evaluated
Emery CA. Risk Factors for Injury in Child and Adolescent Sport: A Systematic Review of the Literature. CJSM, 2003. (LOE 2-4) Risk Factor Findings • Non-Modifiable • Sex: Males (OR 1.16-2.4) • Exception: soccer, basketball • Previous injury • Reinjury rates 13.1%-38% • Fball (reinjuryvs 1st time injury: RR 1.4-1.7) • Sport Played • Boys: hockey, football, basketball • Girls: gymnastics, basketball, soccer • Age: Older • Level of play: Increasing • Organized vs rec, game vs practice, playoff vs regular season
Key Sports Safety Topics CONCUSSION
Concussion Numbers • 1.6-3.8 million sports-related concussions/yr • CDC MMWR, July 2007. • From 2001 to 2009, the number of sports and recreation-related ED visits for TBI among persons aged ≤19 years increased 62% • CDC MMWR, October 2011. • TBI represents almost 9% of all injuries reported in HS sports • National surveillance in 9 high school sports • Gessel LM et al. J Athl Train, 2007.
Concussion Prevention: Equipment Football Helmets Mouth Guards Head Gear
Football Helmet Ratings: STAR Evaluation System Virginia Tech National Impact Database. May 2011. • 5 Stars • Riddell Revolution Speed • 4 Stars • Schutt ION 4D • Schutt DNA Pro + • Xenith X1 • Ridell Revolution • Riddell Revolution IQ • 3 Stars • Schutt Air XP • 2 Stars • Schutt Air Advantage • 1 Star • Riddell VSR4 • 0 Stars • Adams A2000 Pro Elite Reduction in concussion risk
Mouth Guards • Effects of mouth guards on dental injuries and concussion in college basketball. • Labella et al. MSSE, 2002. (LOE 2) • Findings: • No difference in concussion rate • Significantly lower rate of dental trauma
Head Gear in Soccer • Withnall et al. BJSM, 2005. • Three equipment types tested • No attenuation of mechanical forces due to heading ball • 33% reduction in acceleration forces from direct head-to-head contact • Further evidence needed for effect on injury or concussion prevention
McIntosh AS et al. BJSM, 2011. Summary of Helmet Benefits in Sports
Heading in Soccer • Straume-Naesheime et al. Br J Sports Med, 2005. (LOE 3) • Norwegian elite footballers • Computerized neuropsychological testing • Conclusion: • No evidence of impairment due to heading exposure or previous concussions
Courtesy: Julie Gilchrist, MD, FAAP CDR, US Public Health Service Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention CDC’s “Heads Up” Initiative Goal: Improve prevention, recognition, and response to concussion among young athletes
Targeting Youth Sports “Heads Up: Concussion in Youth Sports” • 2007 • 26 member partnership • Target = volunteers, parents • Content: • Audience ready & appropriate • Fact sheets for coaches, parents, and athletes • Clipboard • Magnet • Poster • Concussion quiz
CDC Unpublished Data Evaluation: Youth Sports Toolkit • Changed knowledge, attitudes, behavior • 63% viewed concussion more seriously • 77% reported more skill in indentifying potential concussions • 72% educated others: athletes, parents, other coaches
Youth Sports Safety Legislation:National Level • Children’s Sports Athletic Equipment Safety Act (HR 1127) • Latest Major Action: 3/28/11 • Encourage and ensure use of safe football helmets. • Protecting Student Athletes From Concussions Act of 2011 (HR 469) • Latest Major Action: 2/25/2011 • Regulations establishing minimum requirements for prevention and treatment of concussions.
http://nflhealthandsafety.com/ Youth Sports Safety Legislation: State-Level As of October 2011, 31 states (plus D.C. & the city of Chicago) have enacted youth concussion laws
Key Sports Safety Topics OVERUSE INJURIES
Overuse Injuries • Why is it happening more often? • Sports specialization at younger ages • Intense year round competition and practice • Growing bodies more susceptible to injury • Parental and coaching pressure and unrealistic expectations • Super competitive youth sports culture
Overuse: Prevention Strategies • Activity modification • Avoid playing for multiple teams at same time • 1-2 days/wk off from competitive sport or training • 2-3 months/yr away from same sport • Incorporate cross training • 10% Rule: Maximum 10% increase in training program variables/week
“BURNOUT” Parents and Coaches Beware! • 70% of kids participating in sports drop out by age 13 • Lose benefits that sports provide • Overtraining syndrome • Series of psychological, physiologic, and hormonal changes that result in decreased sports performance
NCAA Research. Updated September 27, 2011. Estimated Probability of Competing in AthleticsBeyond High School
AAP COSMF & COSH. Pediatrics, 2001. Organized Sports Participation Factors Encourage & Maintain Discourage Failure Embarrassment Competition Boredom Regimentation Injuries • Fun • Success • Variety • Freedom • Family participation • Peer support • Enthusiastic leadership
Educational Programs & Rule Changes • Adherence to rules & limit illegal play • 6.4% of overall injuries in 9 HS sports were related to rules transgressions (98,066 injuries/yr) • Collins CL et al. Inj Prev, 2008. (RIO) • Teaching proper fundamentals & technique • Tackle with head up (↓head/neck trauma) • Educational & Awareness campaigns • Improved knowledge & attitudes, outcome data sparse on injury reduction
Protective Equipment • Eye goggles (lacrosse) – ↓incidence of head & face injury (RR 0.52) • Webster et al. MSSE, 1999. • Knee pads – ↓ incidence of knee injuries (RR 0.44) • Yang et al. Am J Epi, 2005. • Knee braces – no protective effect (RR 2.24) • Grace et al. JBJS (Am), 1988. • Contradictory evidence (MCL, ACL, ↑LE injury)
Lace-Up Ankle Braces • McGuine TA et al. AJSM, 2011 (LOE 1) • HS Football & Basketball (M & W) • Lower incidence of acute ankle injuries • Degree of severity unchanged • No effect on other LE injuries • Benefit for both 1st time & prior sprain • Findings independent of shoe type, taping, field surface
Proprioception & Ankle Sprains • McGuine T et al. AJSM, 2006. • Injury rate • 6.1% balance training program vs 9.9% control • 50% risk reduction if prior sprain & perform intervention
Abernethy L et al. BJSM, 2007. Neuromuscular Prevention Strategies • Systematic review (12 studies; RCT/controlled intervention studies) • Effective in reducing knee & ankle injuries • Preseason conditioning • Functional & sport-specific training • Proprioceptive balance training • Structured warm-up (strengthening, stretching, plyometrics, sport-specific agility, +/- education) • Optimized when sustained during sporting season (RR 0.2-0.73) • NNT: 4-10 for minor/moderate injuries; -66 for serious injury (ACL) • Not Effective • Stretching alone; stretching + warm-up & cool-down • No difference in timing of program (pregame, halftime, etc)
Neuromuscular Interventions • Hewett TE et al. AJSM, 2006. • Meta-analysis 6 studies • Neuromuscular training programs may reduce risk of ACL injury in female athletes • Encourage use of training programs that also emphasize performance enhancement as means to motivate compliance • Increased program effectiveness in athletes
Neuromuscular Training Programs • Contradictory findings regarding improvements on performance • Lindblom et al. Knee Surg Sports Trauma Arthrosc, 2011.
Baseball • Safety balls • Reduced risk of ball-related head & body injury by 23% • Marshall SW et al. JAMA, 2003. • Mixed findings Re: commotio cordis • Chest protectors • No risk reduction of commotio cordis evident • Viano DC et al. J Trauma, 2000. • Sliding • Proper technique & timing • Break-away bases • Hosey RG et al. AJSM, 2000. • Faceguards • Risk reduction of oculofacial injury by 35% • Danis RP et al. Inj Prev, 2000.
Olsen SJ et al. AJSM, 2006. (LOE 3) Overuse Injury: Baseball • Pitchers with history of significant shoulder or elbow injury were more likely than uninjured counterparts to have… • Pitched more months per year, more innings per year, more pitches per game and more pitches per year. • Participated in showcases and pitched through arm pain or fatigue.