Slabaugh Alexander D, Belk John W, Jackson Jonathan C, Robins Richard J, McCarty Eric C, LeClere Lance E, Slabaugh Mark A
Department of Orthopaedics, United States Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA.
Department of Orthopaedics, University of Colorado, School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, USA.
Orthop J Sports Med. 2021 Jan 29;9(1):2325967121992045. doi: 10.1177/2325967121992045. eCollection 2021 Jan.
COVID-19 is a severe respiratory virus that spreads via person-to-person contact through respiratory droplets. Since being declared a pandemic in early March 2020, the World Health Organization had yet to release guidelines regarding the return of college or professional sports for the 2020-2021 season.
To survey the head orthopedic surgeons and primary care team physicians for the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) football teams so as to gauge the management of common COVID-19 issues for the fall 2020 college football season.
Cross-sectional study.
The head team orthopaedic surgeons and primary care physicians for all 130 FBS football teams were surveyed regarding their opinions on the management of college football during the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 30 questions regarding testing, return-to-play protocol, isolating athletes, and other management issues were posed via email survey sent on June 5, 2020.
Of the 210 team physicians surveyed, 103 (49%) completed the questionnaire. Overall, 36.9% of respondents felt that it was unsafe for college athletes to return to playing football during fall 2020. While the majority of football programs (96.1%) were testing athletes for COVID-19 as they returned to campus, only 78.6% of programs required athletes to undergo a mandatory quarantine period before resuming involvement in athletic department activities. Of the programs that were quarantining their players upon return to campus, 20% did so for 1 week, 20% for 2 weeks, and 32.9% quarantined their athletes until they had a negative COVID-19 test.
While US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines evolve and geographic regions experience a range of COVID-19 infections, determining a universal strategy for return to socialization and participation in sports remains a challenge. The current study highlighted areas of consensus and strong agreement, but the results also demonstrated a need for clarity and consistency in operations, leadership, and guidance for medical professionals in multiple areas as they attempt to safely mitigate risk for college football players amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
新冠病毒病是一种严重的呼吸道病毒,通过呼吸道飞沫在人与人之间传播。自2020年3月初被宣布为大流行病以来,世界卫生组织尚未发布关于2020-2021赛季大学或职业体育赛事恢复的指导方针。
对美国国家大学体育协会(NCAA)橄榄球碗赛分区(FBS)橄榄球队的骨科主任医生和初级保健团队医生进行调查,以评估2020年秋季大学橄榄球赛季常见新冠病毒病问题的管理情况。
横断面研究。
对所有130支FBS橄榄球队的队医和初级保健医生就其对新冠疫情期间大学橄榄球管理的意见进行调查。2020年6月5日通过电子邮件调查提出了总共30个关于检测、恢复比赛协议、隔离运动员及其他管理问题。
在接受调查的210名队医中,103名(49%)完成了问卷。总体而言,36.9%的受访者认为2020年秋季大学运动员恢复橄榄球比赛不安全。虽然大多数橄榄球项目(96.1%)在运动员返回校园时对其进行新冠病毒检测,但只有78.6%的项目要求运动员在恢复参与体育部门活动前接受强制隔离期。在运动员返回校园时对其进行隔离的项目中,20%隔离1周,20%隔离2周,32.9%将运动员隔离至新冠病毒检测呈阴性。
尽管美国疾病控制与预防中心的指导方针不断演变,且不同地理区域新冠病毒感染情况各异,但确定恢复社交和参与体育活动的通用策略仍是一项挑战。当前研究突出了共识和强烈一致的领域,但结果也表明,在新冠疫情期间,医疗专业人员在多个领域的操作、领导和指导方面需要明确性和一致性,以安全降低大学橄榄球运动员的风险。