Kroshus Emily, Baugh Christine M, Daneshvar Daniel H, Stamm Julie M, Laursen R Mark, Austin S Bryn
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA.
Sport Science Institute, National Collegiate Athletic Association, Indianapolis, IN.
J Athl Train. 2015 Sep;50(9):944-51. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-50.6.03. Epub 2015 Jul 24.
Anecdotal and qualitative evidence has suggested that some clinicians face pressure from coaches and other personnel in the athletic environment to prematurely return athletes to participation after a concussion. This type of pressure potentially can result in compromised patient care.
To quantify the extent to which clinicians in the collegiate sports medicine environment experience pressure when caring for concussed athletes and whether this pressure varies by the supervisory structure of the institution's sports medicine department, the clinician's sex, and other factors.
Cross-sectional study.
Web-based survey of National College Athletic Association member institutions.
A total of 789 athletic trainers and 111 team physicians from 530 institutions.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): We asked participants whether they had experienced pressure from 3 stakeholder populations (other clinicians, coaches, athletes) to prematurely return athletes to participation after a concussion. Modifying variables that we assessed were the position (athletic trainer, physician) and sex of the clinicians, the supervisory structure of their institutions' sports medicine departments, and the division of competition in which their institutions participate.
We observed that 64.4% (n = 580) of responding clinicians reported having experienced pressure from athletes to prematurely clear them to return to participation after a concussion, and 53.7% (n = 483) reported having experienced this pressure from coaches. Only 6.6% (n = 59) reported having experienced pressure from other clinicians to prematurely clear an athlete to return to participation after a concussion. Clinicians reported greater pressure from coaches when their departments were under the supervisory purview of the athletic department rather than a medical institution. Female clinicians reported greater pressure from coaches than male clinicians did.
Most clinicians reported experiencing pressure to prematurely return athletes to participation after a concussion. Identifying factors that are associated with variability in pressure on clinicians during concussion recovery can inform potential future strategies to reduce these pressures.
轶事和定性证据表明,在运动环境中,一些临床医生面临来自教练和其他人员的压力,要求脑震荡后的运动员过早恢复参赛。这种压力可能会导致患者护理质量下降。
量化大学运动医学环境中的临床医生在照顾脑震荡运动员时所经历的压力程度,以及这种压力是否因机构运动医学部门的监管结构、临床医生的性别和其他因素而有所不同。
横断面研究。
对全国大学体育协会成员机构进行基于网络的调查。
来自530个机构的789名运动训练师和111名队医。
我们询问参与者是否经历过来自3个利益相关群体(其他临床医生、教练、运动员)的压力,要求脑震荡后的运动员过早恢复参赛。我们评估的修正变量包括临床医生的职位(运动训练师、医生)和性别、其机构运动医学部门的监管结构,以及其机构参与的竞赛部门。
我们观察到,64.4%(n = 580)的受访临床医生报告称经历过来自运动员的压力,要求过早批准他们在脑震荡后恢复参赛,53.7%(n = 483)报告称经历过来自教练的这种压力。只有6.6%(n = 59)报告称经历过来自其他临床医生的压力,要求过早批准运动员在脑震荡后恢复参赛。临床医生报告称,当他们的部门处于体育部门而非医疗机构的监管范围内时,来自教练的压力更大。女性临床医生报告称来自教练的压力比男性临床医生更大。
大多数临床医生报告称在脑震荡后经历过要求运动员过早恢复参赛的压力。确定与脑震荡恢复期间临床医生压力变化相关的因素,可以为未来减少这些压力的潜在策略提供信息。