Sport Injury Prevention Research Centre, Faculty of Kinesiology, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Clin J Sport Med. 2023 Sep 1;33(5):483-488. doi: 10.1097/JSM.0000000000001133. Epub 2023 Feb 21.
To help address the high concussion burden in Canadian youth ice hockey, our primary objective was to examine the concurrent validity of youth ice hockey referees' ability to assess head contacts (HCs) and associated penalties using video analysis methods after implementation of the "zero tolerance for HC" policy by Hockey Canada.
Cross-sectional study.
Certified Level II-III referees in Alberta, Canada.
A secured online survey with 60 videos (10 to 15 seconds) containing a player-to-player physical contact with or without a HC from elite U15 (ages 13 to 14) youth ice hockey games.
Survey questions were completed by all referees for each video, including (1). 'Did you see a player-to-player contact?', (2). 'Should a penalty be assessed?', and if yes, (3). 'Which player, penalty type, and penalty intensity?' Referee assessments were compared with a consensus agreement from 2 national and member (top level) gold standard referees for concurrent validity through percent agreement and sensitivity/specificity measures.
Complete-case analysis of 100 referees (131 recruited) showed an overall median agreement of 83.5% (sensitivity = 0.74; specificity = 0.69) with the gold standard. Agreement with the gold standard was highest for HC infractions [85.1% (sensitivity = 0.80; specificity = 0.69)], followed by HC penalty type (81.5%) and penalty intensity (53.7%).
Concurrent validity through percent agreement was high (>80%) compared with the gold standard for identifying both HC and other infractions; however, it was moderate for penalty intensity. Although knowledge of identifying HCs and penalties in this survey was acceptable, this study suggests in-game factors (eg, game management and positioning) may be a primary limitation for HC enforcement.
为了帮助解决加拿大青少年冰球中高比例的脑震荡问题,我们的主要目标是在加拿大曲棍球协会实施“零容忍头部碰撞”政策后,使用视频分析方法来检验青少年冰球裁判评估头部接触(HC)和相关处罚的能力的同时效度。
横断面研究。
加拿大艾伯塔省的认证二级-三级裁判。
一项安全的在线调查,包含 60 个视频(10 到 15 秒),其中有来自精英 U15(年龄 13 到 14 岁)青少年冰球比赛的球员之间的身体接触,其中包含或不包含 HC。
每位裁判都要对每个视频完成调查问题,包括:(1)“你看到球员之间的接触了吗?”;(2)“应该判罚吗?”;如果是,(3)“哪个球员、处罚类型和处罚强度?”裁判的评估结果与来自 2 名国家级和 1 名成员(顶级)金牌标准裁判的共识协议进行了比较,通过百分率一致性和敏感性/特异性测量来评估同时效度。
100 名裁判(招募了 131 名)的完整病例分析显示,黄金标准的总体中位数一致性为 83.5%(敏感性=0.74;特异性=0.69)。对于 HC 违规行为,一致性最高[85.1%(敏感性=0.80;特异性=0.69)],其次是 HC 处罚类型(81.5%)和处罚强度(53.7%)。
与黄金标准相比,通过百分率一致性来评估识别 HC 和其他违规行为的同时效度较高(>80%);然而,对于处罚强度则为中等。虽然在本次调查中,识别 HC 和处罚的知识是可以接受的,但这项研究表明,比赛中的因素(例如,比赛管理和定位)可能是 HC 执行的主要限制因素。