COVID-19 National Football League (NFL) Injury Analysis: Follow-Up Study.

JMIRx med Pub Date : 2024-02-13 DOI:10.2196/45688
Troy B Puga, Joshua Schafer, Grace Thiel, Nicholas Scigliano, Tiffany Ruan, Andres Toledo, Prince N Agbedanu, Kevin Treffer
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Abstract

Background: In 2020, COVID-19 spread across the world and brought normal daily life to a halt, causing the shutdown of nearly everything in order to prevent its spread. The National Football League (NFL) similarly experienced shutdowns and the resulting effects, leaving athletes unable to train in some of the most advanced facilities with many of the best trainers in the world. A previous study, titled COVID-19 Return to Sport: NFL Injury Prevalence Analysis, determined that there was increased injury prevalence during the 2020 season, likely due to decreased physiological adaptations within athletes' bodies as a result of facility shutdowns. Understanding injury epidemiology is vital to the prevention of injuries and the development of return-to-play protocols.

Objective: The objective of this study is to perform a follow-up study to COVID-19 Return to Sport: NFL Injury Prevalence Analysis in order to examine the longitudinal effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on injury epidemiology. This study examines if there was a recovery to baseline levels of injuries or if there are still lingering effects from the COVID-19 pandemic-induced spike in injuries.

Methods: To determine if there was change in the number of injuries for each season, injury tallies collected from the 17-week-long 2018, 2019, and 2020 NFL regular seasons were compared with those from the 18-week-long 2021 and 2022 NFL regular seasons. A Kruskall-Wallis test with post hoc Dunn analysis was conducted to compare the rate of injuries per team per week between each of the 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, and 2022 regular seasons.

Results: The Kruskall-Wallis test revealed an H statistic of 32.61 (P<.001) for the comparison of the injury rates across the 5 seasons. The post hoc Dunn analysis showed that 2020 had a statistically significant difference when compared with each of the 2018 (P<.001), 2019 (P=.04), 2021 (P=.02), and 2022 (P=.048) seasons. The 2019 season showed no statistical significance when compared with the 2021 (P=.23) and 2022 (P=.13) seasons.

Conclusions: The results of this follow-up study, combined with the previous study, show that extended training interruptions stemming from COVID-19 in 2020 induced detraining and led to increased injuries. Additionally, the results of this study show that retraining can occur, resulting in the development of injury protective factors, as injury rates returned to baseline levels after 2020. This is the first large-scale and long-term opportunity to demonstrate the effects of these principles and how they are important to understanding injury epidemiology.

COVID-19 全国橄榄球联盟(NFL)伤病分析:后续研究。
背景介绍2020 年,COVID-19 在全球蔓延,导致正常的日常生活陷入停顿,为防止其扩散,几乎所有事物都被关闭。美国国家橄榄球联盟(NFL)也同样经历了关闭及其造成的影响,导致运动员无法在一些最先进的设施中与世界上许多最好的训练师一起训练。之前的一项研究名为 COVID-19 运动回归:NFL 伤病流行率分析》的研究确定,2020 赛季的伤病流行率有所上升,这很可能是由于设施关闭导致运动员体内的生理适应能力下降。了解损伤流行病学对预防损伤和制定重返赛场方案至关重要:本研究的目的是对 COVID-19 回归运动进行跟踪研究:NFL 损伤流行率分析》的后续研究,以考察 COVID-19 大流行对损伤流行病学的纵向影响。本研究将探讨受伤人数是否已恢复到基线水平,或者 COVID-19 大流行引发的受伤人数激增是否仍有遗留影响:为了确定每个赛季的受伤人数是否发生了变化,我们将从2018、2019和2020年为期17周的NFL常规赛中收集到的受伤人数与2021和2022年为期18周的NFL常规赛中收集到的受伤人数进行了比较。通过 Kruskall-Wallis 检验和事后 Dunn 分析,比较了 2018、2019、2020、2021 和 2022 年每个常规赛期间每支球队每周的受伤率:Kruskall-Wallis检验显示H统计量为32.61(PC结论:这项后续研究的结果与之前的研究结果相结合,表明 2020 年 COVID-19 导致的长时间训练中断诱发了脱离训练,并导致了伤病的增加。此外,本研究结果表明,随着 2020 年后受伤率恢复到基线水平,可以进行再训练,从而形成受伤保护因素。这是第一次有机会大规模、长期地展示这些原则的效果,以及它们对了解损伤流行病学的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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