CONCUSSION OCCURRENCE AND KNOWLEDGE IN ITALIAN FOOTBALL (SOCCER)

The purpose of the study was to investigate concussion history, knowledge, injury identification, and management strategies among athletes, coaches, and medical staff in Italian club level football (soccer) clubs. Surveys (N=727) were distributed among Italian football clubs. Athletes' surveys...

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Main Authors: Steven P. Broglio, Roberto Vagnozzi, Matthew Sabin, Stefano Signoretti, Barbara Tavazzi, Giuseppe Lazzarino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Uludag 2010-09-01
Series:Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jssm.org/vol9/n3/10/v9n3-10text.php
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spelling doaj-5b06bc6a217240fcab406ee57c5baee82020-11-24T23:42:40ZengUniversity of UludagJournal of Sports Science and Medicine1303-29682010-09-0193418430CONCUSSION OCCURRENCE AND KNOWLEDGE IN ITALIAN FOOTBALL (SOCCER)Steven P. BroglioRoberto VagnozziMatthew SabinStefano SignorettiBarbara TavazziGiuseppe LazzarinoThe purpose of the study was to investigate concussion history, knowledge, injury identification, and management strategies among athletes, coaches, and medical staff in Italian club level football (soccer) clubs. Surveys (N=727) were distributed among Italian football clubs. Athletes' surveys were designed to evaluate athlete knowledge of concussive signs and symptoms and injury reporting. Coaches' surveys explored the understanding of concussive signs and symptoms and management practices. Medical staff surveys explored the standard of care regarding concussions. A total of 342 surveys were returned, for a 47% response rate. Descriptive analyses indicated 10% of athletes sustaining a concussion in the past year and 62% of these injuries were not reported, primarily due to the athletes not thinking the injury was serious enough. Coaches consistently identified non-concussion related symptoms (98.7%), but were unable to identify symptoms associated with concussion (38.9%). Most understood that loss of consciousness is not the sole indicator of injury (82.6%). Medical staff reported a heavy reliance on the clinical exam (92%) and athlete symptom reports (92%) to make the concussion diagnosis and return to play decision, with little use of neurocognitive (16.7%) or balance (0.0%) testing. Italian football athletes appear to report concussions at a rate similar to American football players, with a slightly higher rate of unreported injuries. Most of these athletes were aware they were concussed, but did not feel the injury was serious enough to report. Although coaches served as the primary person to whom concussions were reported, the majority of coaches were unable to accurately identify concussion related symptoms. With little use for neurocognitive and postural control assessments, the medical personnel may be missing injuries or returning athletes to play too soon. Collectively, these findings suggest that athletes, coaches, and medical personnel would benefit from concussion based educational materials on the signs, symptoms, and evaluative techniques of concussionhttp://www.jssm.org/vol9/n3/10/v9n3-10text.phpMild traumatic brain injurysymptoms
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Steven P. Broglio
Roberto Vagnozzi
Matthew Sabin
Stefano Signoretti
Barbara Tavazzi
Giuseppe Lazzarino
spellingShingle Steven P. Broglio
Roberto Vagnozzi
Matthew Sabin
Stefano Signoretti
Barbara Tavazzi
Giuseppe Lazzarino
CONCUSSION OCCURRENCE AND KNOWLEDGE IN ITALIAN FOOTBALL (SOCCER)
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Mild traumatic brain injury
symptoms
author_facet Steven P. Broglio
Roberto Vagnozzi
Matthew Sabin
Stefano Signoretti
Barbara Tavazzi
Giuseppe Lazzarino
author_sort Steven P. Broglio
title CONCUSSION OCCURRENCE AND KNOWLEDGE IN ITALIAN FOOTBALL (SOCCER)
title_short CONCUSSION OCCURRENCE AND KNOWLEDGE IN ITALIAN FOOTBALL (SOCCER)
title_full CONCUSSION OCCURRENCE AND KNOWLEDGE IN ITALIAN FOOTBALL (SOCCER)
title_fullStr CONCUSSION OCCURRENCE AND KNOWLEDGE IN ITALIAN FOOTBALL (SOCCER)
title_full_unstemmed CONCUSSION OCCURRENCE AND KNOWLEDGE IN ITALIAN FOOTBALL (SOCCER)
title_sort concussion occurrence and knowledge in italian football (soccer)
publisher University of Uludag
series Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
issn 1303-2968
publishDate 2010-09-01
description The purpose of the study was to investigate concussion history, knowledge, injury identification, and management strategies among athletes, coaches, and medical staff in Italian club level football (soccer) clubs. Surveys (N=727) were distributed among Italian football clubs. Athletes' surveys were designed to evaluate athlete knowledge of concussive signs and symptoms and injury reporting. Coaches' surveys explored the understanding of concussive signs and symptoms and management practices. Medical staff surveys explored the standard of care regarding concussions. A total of 342 surveys were returned, for a 47% response rate. Descriptive analyses indicated 10% of athletes sustaining a concussion in the past year and 62% of these injuries were not reported, primarily due to the athletes not thinking the injury was serious enough. Coaches consistently identified non-concussion related symptoms (98.7%), but were unable to identify symptoms associated with concussion (38.9%). Most understood that loss of consciousness is not the sole indicator of injury (82.6%). Medical staff reported a heavy reliance on the clinical exam (92%) and athlete symptom reports (92%) to make the concussion diagnosis and return to play decision, with little use of neurocognitive (16.7%) or balance (0.0%) testing. Italian football athletes appear to report concussions at a rate similar to American football players, with a slightly higher rate of unreported injuries. Most of these athletes were aware they were concussed, but did not feel the injury was serious enough to report. Although coaches served as the primary person to whom concussions were reported, the majority of coaches were unable to accurately identify concussion related symptoms. With little use for neurocognitive and postural control assessments, the medical personnel may be missing injuries or returning athletes to play too soon. Collectively, these findings suggest that athletes, coaches, and medical personnel would benefit from concussion based educational materials on the signs, symptoms, and evaluative techniques of concussion
topic Mild traumatic brain injury
symptoms
url http://www.jssm.org/vol9/n3/10/v9n3-10text.php
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