California State University, Los Angeles.
UNC Greensboro, North Carolina.
J Athl Train. 2022 Jan 1;57(1):92-98. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-0731.20.
Former collegiate athletes may be at risk for negative health outcomes such as lower health-related quality of life (HRQoL), greater disablement, and lower lifetime physical activity (PA) participation. A history of severe sport injury may play a role in these outcomes.
To assess the role of prior sport injury in self-reported HRQoL, levels of disablement, and PA behaviors of former National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I women's soccer players.
Cross-sectional study.
Online survey.
Former Division I women's soccer players (n = 382, age = 36.41 ± 7.76 years) provided demographics and injury history and completed the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (HRQoL), the Disablement in the Physically Active Scale (disablement), and the Godin Leisure Time Physical Activity Questionnaire (PA).
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): The dependent variables were the physical and mental component summary scores for HRQoL and disablement and the frequency of moderate-to-vigorous PA. Means, SDs, and correlations among the main outcome variables were examined for those who reported a severe injury (n = 261) and those who did not (n = 121). To address our primary aim, we conducted multiple regression analyses to predict HRQoL, disablement, and PA based on a history of severe injury, accounting for age.
Having a severe injury significantly predicted worse physical HRQoL and worse physical disablement. Severe injury predicted a >2-point decrease and 5-point increase on the respective scales. Injury status did not predict mental HRQoL, mental disablement, or PA.
Most participants reported sustaining a prior severe soccer-related injury, which may have had a negative long-term effect on health outcomes for former women's soccer players. Athletic trainers should be aware of the risk for decreased HRQoL and increased disablement with injury and encourage continued monitoring of relevant patient-reported outcomes.
前大学生运动员可能面临负面健康结果的风险,例如较低的健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)、更大的残疾和较低的终身体力活动(PA)参与度。既往严重运动损伤史可能在这些结果中起作用。
评估既往运动损伤对美国全国大学体育协会(NCAA)一级女子足球运动员既往史报告的 HRQoL、残疾程度和 PA 行为的影响。
横断面研究。
在线调查。
前一级女子足球运动员(n = 382,年龄=36.41 ± 7.76 岁)提供人口统计学和损伤史,并完成患者报告的结果测量信息系统(HRQoL)、体力活动障碍量表(残疾)和戈丁休闲时间体力活动问卷(PA)。
依赖变量为 HRQoL 和残疾的生理和心理成分综合评分以及中等至剧烈 PA 的频率。检查报告严重损伤(n = 261)和未报告严重损伤(n = 121)者的主要结局变量的均值、标准差和相关性。为了达到我们的主要目的,我们进行了多元回归分析,根据严重损伤史预测 HRQoL、残疾和 PA,同时考虑年龄因素。
有严重损伤史显著预测了较差的生理 HRQoL 和较差的生理残疾。损伤史预测了在各自量表上下降 2 分和增加 5 分。损伤状态不能预测心理 HRQoL、心理残疾或 PA。
大多数参与者报告曾发生过严重的与足球相关的损伤,这可能对前女子足球运动员的健康结果产生长期负面影响。运动训练员应意识到损伤会导致 HRQoL 降低和残疾增加,并鼓励持续监测相关的患者报告结果。