Delaney J Scott, Lamfookon Charles, Bloom Gordon A, Al-Kashmiri Ammar, Correa José A
*McGill Sport Medicine Clinic, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; †Department of Emergency Medicine, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; ‡Royal College Emergency Medicine Residency Program, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; §Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; ¶Department of Emergency Medicine, Khoula Hospital, Muscat, Oman; and ‖Department of Mathematics and Statistics, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Clin J Sport Med. 2015 Mar;25(2):113-25. doi: 10.1097/JSM.0000000000000112.
To determine why athletes decide not to seek medical attention during a game or practice when they believe they have suffered a concussion.
A retrospective survey.
University Sport Medicine Clinic.
A total of 469 male and female university athletes from several varsity team sports were participated in the study.
Athletes were surveyed about the previous 12 months to identify specific reasons why those athletes who believed they had suffered a concussion during a game or practice decided not to seek attention at that time, how often these reasons occurred, and how important these reasons were in the decision process.
Ninety-two of the 469 athletes (19.6%) believed they had suffered a concussion within the previous 12 months while playing their respective sport, and 72 of these 92 athletes (78.3%) did not seek medical attention during the game or practice at least once during that time. Sports in which athletes were more likely to not reveal their concussion symptoms were football and ice hockey. The reason "Did not feel the concussion was serious/severe and felt you could still continue to play with little danger to yourself," was listed most commonly (55/92) as a cause for not seeking medical attention for a presumed concussion.
A significant percentage of university athletes who believed they had suffered a concussion chose not to seek medical attention at the time of injury. Improved education of players, parents, and coaches about the dangers of continuing to play with concussion symptoms may help improve reporting.
Medical staff should be aware that university athletes who believe they have suffered a concussion may choose not to volunteer their symptoms during a game or practice for a variety of personal and athletic reasons.
确定运动员在认为自己在比赛或训练中遭受脑震荡时为何决定不寻求医疗救治。
一项回顾性调查。
大学运动医学诊所。
共有469名来自多个大学代表队运动项目的男女运动员参与了该研究。
对运动员进行了为期12个月的调查,以确定那些认为自己在比赛或训练中遭受脑震荡的运动员当时决定不寻求医疗救治的具体原因、这些原因出现的频率以及这些原因在决策过程中的重要性。
469名运动员中有92名(19.6%)认为自己在过去12个月参加各自运动项目时遭受了脑震荡,这92名运动员中有72名(78.3%)在那段时间的比赛或训练中至少有一次没有寻求医疗救治。运动员更有可能不透露脑震荡症状的运动项目是橄榄球和冰球。“不认为脑震荡严重/剧烈,觉得自己仍可继续比赛且对自身危害不大”这一原因被列为不就疑似脑震荡寻求医疗救治的最常见原因(55/92)。
相当一部分认为自己遭受脑震荡的大学运动员在受伤时选择不寻求医疗救治。加强对运动员、家长和教练关于脑震荡症状下继续比赛危险性的教育可能有助于提高报告率。
医务人员应意识到,认为自己遭受脑震荡的大学运动员可能出于各种个人和运动方面的原因,在比赛或训练中不主动说出自己的症状。