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Condition: Depression

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Total 35851 results found since Jan 2013.

Outdoor physical activity bears multiple benefits to health and society.
CONCLUSIONS: Giving the beneficial effects of outdoor sports and -physical activities, promotion strategies should be strongly advocated and developed nationally and globally. Likewise, dedicated research areas should inspire guidelines for the promotion of various outdoor activities - a good practice for the social scenario and the healthcare system. PMID: 30650943 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Sports Medicine and Physical Fitness - January 19, 2019 Category: Sports Medicine Tags: J Sports Med Phys Fitness Source Type: research

Consent, capacity and compliance in concussion management: cave ergo medicus (let the doctor beware).
Abstract While the acute effects of concussion and mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) are well understood, the certainty in the medical literature regarding the long-term outcomes of sports-related concussion is limited. Long-term deficits that may result from single, repeated concussions, and possibly subconcussive impacts, include cognitive dysfunction, depression and executive dysfunction. Perhaps most troublingly, repetitive head impacts have been linked to neurodegenerative diseases, including chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), although the precise risk of long-term consequences remains unknown. CTE repre...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - August 10, 2020 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Turner M, Maddocks D, Hassan M, Anderson A, McCrory P Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

High hopes: lower risk of death due to mental disorders and self-harm in a century-long US Olympian cohort compared with the general population.
CONCLUSION: Olympians have a lower risk of death, favouring an increased longevity compared with the general population for mental disorders, substance abuse and suicides. PMID: 33214139 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - November 19, 2020 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Duncombe SL, Tanaka H, De Larochelambert Q, Schipman J, Toussaint JF, Antero J Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

The impact of sport psychology education on the practice of physiotherapists.
Abstract Sports injury can lead to negative psychological reactions such as frustration or depression and there is now a body of evidence which indicates that sport psychology intervention can benefit sports injury rehabilitation (Heaney, IJSEP 2006;4:67-80). It would, however, appear that physiotherapists are often not equipped to integrate sport psychology into rehabilitation. Generally research has shown that physiotherapists recognise the importance of psychological factors but lack the training to utilise sport psychology (Arvinen-Barrow et al. JSR 2007;16:111-121). This suggests a need for further training; ...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - October 29, 2013 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Heaney C Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

Depression in Athletes: Prevalence and Risk Factors
Depression affects an estimated 6.7% of today’s adult population in a 12-month period. The prevalence rates for certain age groups, such as young adults and older adults, are higher. There are approximately 400,000 National Collegiate Athletic Association student athletes competing each year and 5 to 7 million high school student athletes involved in competitive interscholastic sports. Given such a high prevalence rate in certain age groups and a large denominator pool of athletes, past notions that athletes are devoid of mental health issues have come under scrutiny by sports medicine providers. Initial data suggest tha...
Source: Current Sports Medicine Reports - January 1, 2015 Category: Sports Medicine Tags: General Medical Conditions: Section Articles Source Type: research

Depression in Athletes: Prevalence and Risk Factors
Depression affects an estimated 6.7% of today’s adult population in a 12-month period. The prevalence rates for certain age groups, such as young adults and older adults, are higher. There are approximately 400,000 National Collegiate Athletic Association student athletes competing each year and 5 to 7 million high school student athletes involved in competitive interscholastic sports. Given such a high prevalence rate in certain age groups and a large denominator pool of athletes, past notions that athletes are devoid of mental health issues have come under scrutiny by sports medicine providers. Initial data suggest tha...
Source: Current Sports Medicine Reports - January 1, 2015 Category: Sports Medicine Tags: General Medical Conditions: Section Articles Source Type: research

Predictors of clinical recovery from concussion: a systematic review.
CONCLUSION: The literature on clinical recovery from sport-related concussion has grown dramatically, is mostly mixed, but some factors have emerged as being related to outcome. PMID: 28566342 [PubMed - in process]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - June 1, 2017 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Iverson GL, Gardner AJ, Terry DP, Ponsford JL, Sills AK, Broshek DK, Solomon GS Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

Clinical Utility and Validity of Exercise Vital Sign in Children
Curr Sports Med Rep. 2022 Jan 1;21(1):28-33. doi: 10.1249/JSR.0000000000000928.ABSTRACTWe reviewed charts of 14,446 sports medicine patients, children aged 5 to 18 years, over a 3-year period to determine the discriminant validity of Exercise Vital Sign (EVS) questions. A logistic regression analyzed factors related to any moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA). A linear regression analyzed factors related to amount of MVPA for those who participated in any weekly MVPA. Overall, 48% of children reported meeting physical activity guidelines for 420 min·wk-1. Overall, children reported 400.36 ± 280.04 min·wk-1 of M...
Source: Current Sports Medicine Reports - January 12, 2022 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Julie A Young Brittany N Hand James A Onate Amy E Valasek Source Type: research