Fortington Lauren Victoria, Badenhorst Marelise, Derman Wayne, Emery Carolyn, Pasanen Kati, Schwellnus Martin, Verhagen Evert, Finch Caroline F
Edith Cowan University, Joondalup, Western Australia, Australia.
Sports Performance Research Institute New Zealand (SPRINZ), Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand.
BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med. 2024 Apr 24;10(2):e001794. doi: 10.1136/bmjsem-2023-001794. eCollection 2024.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) Medical and Scientific Commission has supported collating and sharing evidence globally by developing sports medicine consensus statements ('Statements''). Publishing the Statements requires substantial resources that must be balanced by use and impact on policy and practice. This study aimed to gain a better understanding of awareness and uptake of the Statements globally through a survey of the National Olympic Committees (NOC), National Paralympic Committees (NPC) and International Federations (IF).
A cross-sectional survey of medical commission representatives from NOCs/NPCs/IFs. A structured questionnaire was distributed through the IOC head office, informed by prior research. Questions comprised a mix of closed and open-text responses with results presented descriptively by organisation type and total.
55 responses were included: 29 (52%) from NOC/NPC representatives (response rate 14%) and 26 (47%) from IF representatives (response rate 63%). All Statements had been used by at least one respondent, with the Statement addressing concussion ranked highest (used by 33/55). The main barriers to use were financial limitations (n=21), club/sport culture and behaviours (n=19) and lack of understanding from coaches/team sport personnel (n=19). Participants believed the Statements were a successful strategy for improving athlete health (n=39/51 agree or strongly agree).
There was clear support for the continued development of sports medicine guidance, including in the format of these Statements. To ensure Statements lead to demonstrable health benefits for athletes, input from athletes, coaches and supporting staff is needed, as well as clearer identification of the purpose and audience of each topic developed.
国际奥委会医学与科学委员会通过制定运动医学共识声明(“声明”)来支持在全球范围内整理和分享证据。发布这些声明需要大量资源,必须在其对政策和实践的使用及影响之间取得平衡。本研究旨在通过对国家奥林匹克委员会(NOC)、国家残奥委员会(NPC)和国际体育联合会(IF)进行调查,更好地了解全球对这些声明的知晓度和采用情况。
对NOC/NPC/IF的医学委员会代表进行横断面调查。根据先前的研究,通过国际奥委会总部分发一份结构化问卷。问题包括封闭式和开放式文本回答,结果按组织类型和总体进行描述性呈现。
共纳入55份回复:29份(52%)来自NOC/NPC代表(回复率14%),26份(47%)来自IF代表(回复率63%)。所有声明都至少被一位受访者使用过,关于脑震荡的声明排名最高(33/55使用)。使用的主要障碍是资金限制(n = 21)、俱乐部/体育文化和行为(n = 19)以及教练/团队运动人员缺乏理解(n = 19)。参与者认为这些声明是改善运动员健康的成功策略(39/51同意或强烈同意)。
对于继续制定运动医学指南,包括以这些声明的形式,有明确的支持。为确保声明能为运动员带来明显的健康益处,需要运动员、教练和支持人员的投入,以及更明确地确定每个主题的目的和受众。