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Total 24962 results found since Jan 2013.

Methods matter: population attributable fraction (PAF) in sport and exercise medicine.
PMID: 32051120 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - February 11, 2020 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Khosravi A, Nielsen RO, Mansournia MA Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

'Theory on relativity': why we need to be 'absolute' and regulate the reporting of injury risk outcome metrics in RCTs in sport and exercise medicine (methods matter series).
PMID: 32179511 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - March 15, 2020 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Roe M, Delahunt E, Büttner F Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

The need for speed! 10 ways that WhatsApp and instant messaging can enhance communication (and clinical care) in sport and exercise medicine.
PMID: 32349964 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - April 28, 2020 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Ahmed OH, Carmody S, Walker LJ, Ahmad I Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

Embrace your discomfort: leadership and unconscious bias in sport and exercise medicine.
PMID: 33051213 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - October 13, 2020 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Marino KR, Vishnubala D, Ahmed OH, Zondi PC, Whittaker JL, Shafik A, Le CY, Chatterjee D, Odulaja A, Jones NE, Thornton JS Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

Infographic. Stay physically active during COVID-19 with exercise as medicine.
PMID: 33097523 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - October 23, 2020 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Wedig IJ, Duelge TA, Elmer SJ Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

We administer and deliver sport: we urgently need help from the sports medicine and research community
Introduction As leaders of large, regional sport governing bodies, we share the same goals as the sport medicine and health research community. We want participants to be safe, supported and for women, girls, and members of marginalised communities to have equal access to sport. In this editorial, we explain why the people who administer and deliver amateur sports urgently need help from the research community with finding solutions to a long list of coaching, child safeguarding, discrimination and funding problems. Playing a sport can deliver lifelong health, psychological and social benefits.1 2 More broadly, as Nelson M...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - April 28, 2023 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Hay, N., Kehoe, A. Tags: BJSM Editorial Source Type: research

Getting the message across: the role of technology-enabled knowledge translation in sports medicine research
What is the next step—beyond publishing journal articles—to disseminate sports and exercise medicine (SEM) research findings to a large audience? How can we educate coaches on supporting players suffering from concussion, or tennis players on injuries, in a timely manner? The increasingly predominant role of technology and media has allowed researchers to rapidly disseminate and implement new research findings. Known as technology-enabled knowledge translation (TEKT), this method enhances traditional KT by disseminating evidence-based information on widely accessible platforms, and providing the opportunity to ...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - July 6, 2023 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Karmali, S., Babul, S. Tags: BJSM Editorial Source Type: research

Risk factors, diagnosis and non-surgical treatment for meniscal tears: evidence and recommendations: a statement paper commissioned by the Danish Society of Sports Physical Therapy (DSSF).
Abstract This statement aimed at summarising and appraising the available evidence for risk factors, diagnostic tools and non-surgical treatments for patients with meniscal tears. We systematically searched electronic databases using a pragmatic search strategy approach. Included studies were synthesised quantitatively or qualitatively, as appropriate. Strength of evidence was determined according to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment Development and Evaluation framework. Low-quality evidence suggested that overweight (degenerative tears, k=3), male sex (k=4), contact and pivoting sports (k=2), and frequent...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - February 2, 2018 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Thorlund JB, Juhl CB, Ingelsrud LH, Skou ST Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

Benefits and challenges of serial sports training risk assessment and counselling in kids: the T.R.A.C.K. randomised intervention study.
CONCLUSIONS: In this convenience sample of youth athletes, electronic training counselling surrounding safe sports participation was not determined to affect injury risk. Lack of knowledge and adherence to appropriate training recommendations is evident and barriers to compliance exist. PMID: 30448778 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - November 17, 2018 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Kliethermes SA, Dugas LR, LaBella CR, Alawad N, Pasulka J, Jayanthi N Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

Implementing a junior high school-based programme to reduce sports injuries through neuromuscular training (iSPRINT): a cluster randomised controlled trial (RCT).
CONCLUSION: The iSPRINT NMT warm-up was effective in preventing each of all recorded injuries, lower extremity injuries and medically treated S&R injuries in female junior high school students. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT03312504. PMID: 31822477 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - December 9, 2019 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Emery CA, van den Berg C, Richmond SA, Palacios-Derflingher L, McKay CD, Doyle-Baker PK, McKinlay M, Toomey CM, Nettel-Aguirre A, Verhagen E, Belton K, Macpherson A, Hagel BE Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

Injury characteristics in male youth athletics: a five-season prospective study in a full-time sports academy.
CONCLUSION: Acute muscle strains, stress fractures and bone stress injuries were identified as the main injury concerns in this cohort of young male athletics athletes. The injury characteristics differed between event groups. PMID: 33144348 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - November 3, 2020 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Martínez-Silván D, Wik EH, Alonso JM, Jeanguyot E, Salcinovic B, Johnson A, Cardinale M Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

Self-reported sports injuries and later-life health status in 3357 retired Olympians from 131 countries: a cross-sectional survey among those competing in the games between London 1948 and PyeongChang 2018.
CONCLUSIONS: Almost two-thirds of Olympians who completed the survey reported at least one Olympic-career significant injury. The knee, lumbar spine and shoulder/clavicle were the most commonly injured anatomical locations. One-third of this sample of Olympians attributed current pain and functional limitations to Olympic-career injury. PMID: 33168580 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - November 9, 2020 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Palmer D, Cooper DJ, Emery C, Batt ME, Engebretsen L, Scammell BE, Schamasch P, Shroff M, Soligard T, Steffen K, Whittaker JL, Budgett R Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

Are prevalence measures better than incidence measures in sports injury research?
PMID: 29030388 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - October 13, 2017 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Nielsen RO, Debes-Kristensen K, Hulme A, Bertelsen ML, Møller M, Parner ET, Mansournia MA Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

Exercise-based intervention for prevention of sports injuries (PEDro synthesis).
PMID: 29146751 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - November 16, 2017 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Silva PV, Kamper SJ, Costa LDCM Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

Seven sins when interpreting statistics in sports injury science.
PMID: 29263023 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - December 20, 2017 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Nielsen RO, Chapman CM, Louis WR, Stovitz SD, Mansournia MA, Windt J, Møller M, Parner ET, Hulme A, Bertelsen ML, Finch CF, Casals M, Verhagen E Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research