Adolescent female rugby union players' attitudes, beliefs and behaviours towards injury and injury prevention strategies in England.

IF 3.2 Q1 SPORT SCIENCES
BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine Pub Date : 2025-09-17 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1136/bmjsem-2025-002560
Gemma Knight, Liam Colbert, Omar Heyward, Ben Jones, Carolyn A Emery, Simon Roberts, Keith A Stokes, Stephen W West
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Abstract

Background and aims: Within adolescent female rugby union, various effective injury prevention strategies are available to players to mitigate injury. However, little is known regarding the players' attitudes, beliefs and behaviours towards those strategies, as well as injuries. The primary aim of the study was to investigate the attitudes, beliefs, behaviours and injury-reporting behaviours of adolescent female rugby players regarding injury and injury prevention strategies. The secondary aim was to examine associations between individual factors (eg, player demographics) and injury-reporting behaviours.

Methods: Participants completed an online cross-sectional survey and were recruited from under-16 and under-18 rugby teams in schools/colleges, clubs and developing player pathway programmes in England.

Results: 1062 players were contacted to participate, 424 responded and 422 met the eligibility criteria; 79 participants had incomplete responses. 14% of players had not previously reported a suspected concussion to a coach/medical staff member, and 37% of players had previously not reported sustaining one or more musculoskeletal (MSK) injuries to a coach/medical staff member. Factors cited for non-disclosure of concussion and MSK injuries included not wanting to miss rugby sessions (43% and 39%) and not knowing that symptom(s) were related to an injury (11% and 17%). Players held positive attitudes, beliefs and behaviours towards injury and injury prevention, but their understanding of the effectiveness of protective equipment varied.

Conclusion: This study provides a greater understanding of adolescent female rugby players' attitudes, beliefs and behaviours towards injury and injury prevention and aids in the development of effective injury prevention initiatives.

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英格兰青少年女子橄榄球联盟球员对伤害的态度、信念和行为以及伤害预防策略。
背景和目的:在青少年女子橄榄球联盟中,各种有效的伤害预防策略可供球员使用,以减轻伤害。然而,关于球员对这些策略的态度、信念和行为,以及伤病,我们知之甚少。本研究的主要目的是调查青少年女子橄榄球运动员对伤害和伤害预防策略的态度、信念、行为和伤害报告行为。第二个目的是检查个人因素(如球员人口统计)和受伤报告行为之间的联系。方法:参与者完成了一项在线横断面调查,并从英格兰学校/学院,俱乐部和发展球员途径项目的16岁以下和18岁以下橄榄球队招募。结果:共联系1062名球员参与,424人回复,422人符合条件;79名参与者的回答不完整。14%的球员以前没有向教练/医务人员报告过疑似脑震荡,37%的球员以前没有向教练/医务人员报告过一次或多次肌肉骨骼(MSK)损伤。不愿透露脑震荡和MSK损伤的因素包括不想错过橄榄球比赛(43%和39%),不知道症状与受伤有关(11%和17%)。运动员对伤害和伤害预防持有积极的态度、信念和行为,但他们对防护装备有效性的理解各不相同。结论:本研究提供了青少年女子橄榄球运动员对伤害和伤害预防的态度、信念和行为的更深入的了解,并有助于制定有效的伤害预防措施。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
4.20%
发文量
106
审稿时长
20 weeks
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