McCormack Sam, Till Kevin, Wenlock Jessica, Whitehead Sarah, Stokes Keith A, Bitcon Mark, Brown James, Cross Matt, Davies Phil, Falvey Éanna C, Flahive Sharron, Gardner Andrew, Hendricks Sharief, Johnston Rich, Mellalieu Stephen D, Parmley James, Phillips Gemma, Ramirez Carlos, Stein Joshua, Scantlebury Sean, West Stephen W, Jones Ben
Carnegie Applied Rugby Research (CARR) centre, Leeds Beckett University, Leeds, UK.
England Performance Unit, Rugby Football League, Manchester, UK.
BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med. 2022 Oct 11;8(4):e001440. doi: 10.1136/bmjsem-2022-001440. eCollection 2022.
The importance of contributors that can result in negative player outcomes in sport and the feasibility and barriers to modifying these to optimise player health and well-being have yet to be established. Within rugby codes (rugby league, rugby union and rugby sevens), within male and female cohorts across playing levels (full-time senior, part-time senior, age grade), this project aims to develop a consensus on contributors to negative biopsychosocial outcomes in rugby players (known as the CoNBO study) and establish stakeholder perceived importance of the identified contributors and barriers to their management. This project will consist of three parts; part 1: a systematic review, part 2: a three-round expert Delphi study and part 3: stakeholder rating of feasibility and barriers to management. Within part 1, systematic searches of electronic databases (PubMed, Scopus, MEDLINE, SPORTDiscus, CINAHL) will be performed. The systematic review protocol is registered with PROSPERO. Studies will be searched to identify physical, psychological and/or social factors resulting in negative player outcomes in rugby. Part 2 will consist of a three-round expert Delphi consensus study to establish additional physical, psychological and/or social factors that result in negative player outcomes in rugby and their importance. In part 3, stakeholders (eg, coaches, chief executive officers and players) will provide perceptions of the feasibility and barriers to modifying the identified factors within their setting. On completion, several manuscripts will be submitted for publication in peer-reviewed journals. The findings of this project have worldwide relevance for stakeholders in the rugby codes. PROSPERO registration number CRD42022346751.
在体育领域中,可能导致运动员出现负面结果的因素的重要性,以及改变这些因素以优化运动员健康和福祉的可行性与障碍,尚未得到明确。在橄榄球项目(联盟式橄榄球、英式橄榄球和七人制橄榄球)中,针对不同性别、不同比赛水平(全职成年组、兼职成年组、年龄分级组)的运动员群体,本项目旨在就导致橄榄球运动员出现负面生物心理社会结果的因素达成共识(即“负面生物心理社会结果因素共识研究”),并确定利益相关者对已识别因素的重要性认知以及管理这些因素的障碍。本项目将包括三个部分:第一部分:系统综述;第二部分:三轮专家德尔菲研究;第三部分:利益相关者对管理可行性和障碍的评级。在第一部分中,将对电子数据库(PubMed、Scopus、MEDLINE、SPORTDiscus、CINAHL)进行系统检索。该系统综述方案已在国际前瞻性系统评价注册库(PROSPERO)注册。将检索相关研究,以识别导致橄榄球运动员出现负面结果的身体、心理和/或社会因素。第二部分将包括三轮专家德尔菲共识研究,以确定导致橄榄球运动员出现负面结果的其他身体、心理和/或社会因素及其重要性。在第三部分中,利益相关者(如教练、首席执行官和运动员)将对在其环境中改变已识别因素的可行性和障碍发表看法。完成后,将提交多篇稿件以供同行评审期刊发表。本项目的研究结果对橄榄球项目的全球利益相关者具有重要意义。国际前瞻性系统评价注册库(PROSPERO)注册号:CRD42022346751。