Abstract

This interdisciplinary research project will produce evidence-based recommendations on how injuries in Swedish youth football (soccer) can be prevented. Fewer injuries will positively impact athlete health, performance and career longevity and have the potential to promote life-long physical activity and wellbeing. Injury pattern research demonstrates that injuries are a significant problem in (Swedish) youth sport. Football has a higher traumatic and overuse injury rate than many contact/collision sports (e.g., field hockey, basketball). In research on youth football, the incidence of overuse training injuries was measured as high as 15.4 injuries per 1000 training hours, and the incidence of traumatic and overuse match injuries was 47.5 injuries per 1000 match hours. The injury frequency is alarming and applies to the 54% of children aged 7-14 and the 39% of youths aged 15-19 years who participate in Swedish organised sports. A large body of research identifies injury risk factors and preventative strategies; however, as the recent IOC consensus statement on youth athletic development points out, the existing, mostly bio-medical knowledge does not provide effective evidence-based injury prevention strategies. To address this deficit, interdisciplinary and context-driven knowledge on injury development in youth sport is needed. The proposed project will produce scientific evidence through four consecutive studies: a) Questionnaire to register the types, frequency and management of injuries; b) Laboratory testing of biomechanical, clinical and training-specific parameters to establish individual physical and sport-specific dispositions; c) Observation of sporting contexts to understand sporting cultures, coaching methods and coach-athlete relationships; and d) Interviews with coaches and players to recognize knowledge that shapes coaching and training. The sample of youth players will be recruited from Sweden’s most popular and injury-prone sport: football. Each of the four studies will conduct its own data production and analyses, and a collective analysis will produce integrated evidence. Concrete recommendations for best sporting practice will be developed, which will serve sporting federations, sport education institutions, coaches, sport support staff and players.

Highlights

  • Injury pattern research demonstrates that injuries are a significant problem in (Swedish) youth sport (Boström et al 2015, Jacobsson et al 2013, Rosen et al 2016, Rosen et al 2017)

  • In research on youth football, the incidence of overuse training injuries was measured as high as 15.4 injuries per 1000 training hours, and the incidence of traumatic and overuse match injuries was 47.5 injuries per 1000 match hours (Junge 2004)

  • During Peak Height Velocity (PHV), the immature musculoskeletal system is less able to cope with trauma and stress (Micheli and Klein 1991)

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Summary

Introduction

Injury pattern research demonstrates that injuries are a significant problem in (Swedish) youth sport (Boström et al 2015, Jacobsson et al 2013, Rosen et al 2016, Rosen et al 2017). In research on youth football, the incidence of overuse training injuries was measured as high as 15.4 injuries per 1000 training hours, and the incidence of traumatic and overuse match injuries was 47.5 injuries per 1000 match hours (Junge 2004). A large body of literature on child and adolescent sport injury risk factors and prevention strategies exists (Bergeron et al 2015). This literature documents that a range of factors cause injuries, including a) growth and maturation; b) biomechanical and training parameters; c) sporting contexts and coaching practice; and d) norms. There is, a lack of evidence to support a cause or effect relationship between maturation and injury (Bowerman et al 2014, Jayanthi et al 2015)

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