Abstract

Despite being an essential consideration when deciding rule changes, injury prevention strategies, and athlete development models, there is little epidemiological data of U18 field hockey player injuries–something explicitly referred to in the 2015 International Olympic Committee’s Consensus Statement on Youth Athlete Development. The aim of this study was to quantify incidence and characteristics of injuries in elite youth field hockey players during a major international tournament. Standardized reporting forms detailing time, location on pitch, mechanism and anatomical location of injury were completed for new musculoskeletal conditions resulting in a time stoppage by the umpire and where a player was noticeably affected by an injury for up to 20 s regardless of time stoppage. Injury incidence was 1.35 and 2.20 injuries/match or 53 and 86 injuries per 1000 player match hours for boys (B) and girls (G) respectively; girls were over three times more likely to have a minor injury. Most injuries were contusions due to being hit by the ball or stick (B: 12, G: 27), with high numbers of injuries to the torso (B: 8) and head/face (G: 7). Injuries during the penalty corner (B: 3, G: 4) were to the lower limb and hand, and boys were less likely to wear facial protection (B: 65.9%, G: 86.4%). Results form an essential initial dataset of injuries in U18 field hockey players. Current reporting protocols under-report injuries and must be addressed by the international governing body. The high number of head/face injuries, particularly in females, requires further investigation.

Highlights

  • The International Olympic Committee’s consensus statement on youth athlete development explicitly states the importance of adopting an evidence-based, holistic approach when working with young sportspeople to maximize enjoyment and involvement in physical activity [1]

  • Girls were likely to be injured in pools and finals stages (88 compared to 83 injuries/1000 player-match hours (PMH)), with a decreased incidence of minor injury as they progressed from pool to final stages (55 to 39 injuries/1000 PMH), and increased incidence of a more serious injury requiring time stoppage (32 to 44 injuries/1000 PMH)

  • Girls were over four times more likely to have a minor injury in the pools than boys (55 vs. 13 injuries/1000 PMH), but incidence of serious injury was similar

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Summary

Introduction

The International Olympic Committee’s consensus statement on youth athlete development explicitly states the importance of adopting an evidence-based, holistic approach when working with young sportspeople to maximize enjoyment and involvement in physical activity [1]. A key consideration in developing technical and tactical proficiency within a sport is ensuring it occurs in as safe an environment as possible. Implementation of successful injury prevention strategies within youth sport is multi-factorial, but an essential first step requires establishing. Injuries in elite U18 field hockey players

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