Department of Sports Medicine, Sturzebecker Health Sciences Center, West Chester University, PA.
Department of School Psychology, Special Education, and Sociology, Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
J Athl Train. 2024 Nov 1;59(11):1056-1062. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-0065.24.
Underreporting of concussion symptoms in college athletics presents a challenge for sports medicine clinicians in evaluating and diagnosing such injuries. Some athletes do not report concussion symptoms because they do not recognize that they have a brain injury; however, many athletes intentionally withhold symptoms to avoid removal from sport participation.
To examine individual factors that influence college athletes' intentions to report concussion symptoms.
Cross-sectional study.
Collegiate athletics.
Participants were 2649 student-athletes from 23 sports, across 22 colleges and universities.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): The primary outcome was intention to report concussion symptoms. Predictor variables included demographics (age, race/ethnicity, sex, sport type, number of years in sport, number of previous concussions, and perceived concussion symptom knowledge), athletic identity, attitudes toward symptom reporting, perceived social pressure (injunctive and descriptive norms), and perceived behavioral control (capacity and autonomy).
Hierarchical ordinary least-squares regression revealed positive effects of attitude (b = 0.063, P = .005), descriptive norms (b = 0.131, P < .001), injunctive norms (b = 0.107, P < .001), and capacity (b = 0.196, P < .001) on intention to report symptoms. Athletic identity and participation in collision sports had small negative indirect effects on intention, and perceived concussion knowledge had a small positive indirect effect. The full regression model explained 14.24% of the variance in concussion-reporting intention.
These findings may help clinicians develop more focused interventions that address key social and individual determinants of underreporting, including attitude, injunctive and descriptive norms, and capacity to report. Athletic identity, sport type, and perceived understanding of concussion symptoms also influence reporting intention to a lesser extent. Previous research in this area has often failed to address a diverse population of college-age athletes from different sports and National Collegiate Athletic Association divisions.
大学生运动员对脑震荡症状的漏报给运动医学临床医生评估和诊断此类损伤带来了挑战。一些运动员没有报告脑震荡症状,因为他们没有意识到自己有脑损伤;然而,许多运动员故意隐瞒症状,以避免被取消运动参与资格。
研究影响大学生运动员报告脑震荡症状意向的个体因素。
横断面研究。
大学运动。
参与者为来自 23 项运动的 2649 名学生运动员,来自 22 所学院和大学。
主要结果是报告脑震荡症状的意向。预测变量包括人口统计学因素(年龄、种族/民族、性别、运动类型、运动年限、既往脑震荡次数和感知脑震荡症状知识)、运动身份、对报告症状的态度、感知社会压力(规范和描述性规范)和感知行为控制(能力和自主性)。
分层最小二乘回归显示,态度(b = 0.063,P =.005)、描述性规范(b = 0.131,P <.001)、规范性规范(b = 0.107,P <.001)和能力(b = 0.196,P <.001)对报告症状的意向有积极影响。运动身份和参与碰撞运动对意向有较小的负间接影响,而感知脑震荡知识有较小的正间接影响。完整的回归模型解释了报告意向中 14.24%的变异。
这些发现可能有助于临床医生制定更有针对性的干预措施,以解决报告不足的关键社会和个体决定因素,包括态度、规范性和描述性规范以及报告能力。运动身份、运动类型和对脑震荡症状的感知理解也在较小程度上影响报告意向。该领域的先前研究通常未能解决来自不同运动和全国大学生体育协会分部的不同年龄段运动员的多样化人群。