Trojian Thomas, Violano Pina, Hall Matthew, Duncan Charles
Division of Sports Medicine, Drexel University College of Medicine, 10 Shurs Lane, Philadelphia, PA, 19127, USA.
Trauma Department, Yale-New Haven Hospital, 300 George Street, 4th Floor, Room 443, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA.
Inj Epidemiol. 2015 Dec;2(1):2. doi: 10.1186/s40621-015-0034-7. Epub 2015 Feb 26.
Connecticut (CT) passed its original sport-related concussion (SRC) law (PA 10-62) in 2010. The law requires that a health-care professional evaluate high school athletes with concussion symptoms. The purpose of this study was to evaluate two level 1 Trauma Center Emergency Department (ED) records for SRC before and after the Connecticut Public Act (CT PA) 10-62 to determine if the law had an effect on the presentation to the ED of SRCs.
A retrospective analysis of two level 1 Trauma Center Emergency Departments database was performed. Monthly data on SRCs treated in the study EDs from July 2003 through June 2012 were collected and analyzed using the autoregressive integrated moving average model. The number of SRCs in the youth (under age 14 years), high school (age 14 to 18 years), and adult (age >18 years) populations prior to CT PA 10-62 was compared to the number of SRCs post implementation of CT PA 10-62 for each academic school year, fall sports season, and summertime.
Monthly SRCs in high school students treated in the study EDs increased from 2.5 cases to 5.9 cases between pre and post implementation of CT PA 10-62 (p < 0.001). Statistical modeling revealed that implementation of CT PA 10-62 was associated with significantly increased SRCs treated in the study EDs and that the increase was limited to the high school students in the fall season and during the school year.
There has been a marked increase in the frequency of SRCs treated in the emergency departments in the high school population in Connecticut after the implementation of the sport-related concussion law. The results suggest that the sport-related concussion law in Connecticut is effective in improving the evaluation and detection of SRCs in high school students.
康涅狄格州(CT)于2010年通过了其最初的与运动相关的脑震荡(SRC)法律(PA 10 - 62)。该法律要求医疗保健专业人员对有脑震荡症状的高中运动员进行评估。本研究的目的是评估康涅狄格州公法(CT PA)10 - 62实施前后,两家一级创伤中心急诊科(ED)关于SRC的记录,以确定该法律是否对SRC患者到急诊科就诊产生影响。
对两家一级创伤中心急诊科数据库进行回顾性分析。收集并使用自回归积分移动平均模型分析了2003年7月至2012年6月期间研究急诊科治疗的SRC月度数据。将CT PA 10 - 62实施前青少年(14岁以下)、高中(14至18岁)和成人(18岁以上)人群中的SRC数量与CT PA 10 - 62实施后每个学年、秋季运动赛季和夏季的SRC数量进行比较。
在CT PA 10 - 62实施前后,研究急诊科治疗的高中学生月度SRC从2.5例增加到5.9例(p < 0.001)。统计模型显示,CT PA 10 - 62的实施与研究急诊科治疗的SRC显著增加相关,且增加仅限于秋季和学年的高中学生。
康涅狄格州实施与运动相关的脑震荡法律后,高中人群在急诊科治疗的SRC频率显著增加。结果表明,康涅狄格州的与运动相关的脑震荡法律在改善高中学生SRC的评估和检测方面是有效的。