Post Eric G, Anderson Travis, Samson Olivia, Gidley Alexis D, Triplett Ashley N, Donaldson Amber T, Finnoff Jonathan T, Adams William M
Department of Sports Medicine, United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee, 1 Olympic Plaza, Colorado Springs, CO, 80909, USA.
United States Coalition for the Prevention of Illness and Injury in Sport, Colorado Springs, CO, USA.
Inj Epidemiol. 2024 Jul 1;11(1):28. doi: 10.1186/s40621-024-00514-4.
The purpose of this report is to provide insight and details regarding the development and implementation of an injury and illness surveillance (IIS) system for the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC).
The development and deployment of the IIS employed a multiphase approach. First, researchers determined variables to include in the IIS using the recommendations from the 2020 IOC consensus statement for reporting sport epidemiological data. Second, the hosting and deployment platforms were comprehensively evaluated for their suitability, ease of use, flexibility, and backend data structure (for both capture and aggregation). Third, focus groups consisting of the Sports Medicine department leadership and clinicians piloted the IIS system and revisions were made based on their feedback. Pilot testing of the IIS and follow-up focus groups were then conducted among all departmental clinicians to solicit additional feedback and drive further revisions. Finally, the IIS system was piloted among providers working during the 2023 Pan American and Parapan American Games to refine the system for future Games. After reviewing all potential software platform options (electronic medical record [EMR] system, athlete management systems, secure data collection platforms), Qualtrics (Qualtrics, Provo, UT, USA) was selected to host the IIS system. This choice was made due to the inability of the EMR and athlete-management systems to make frequent updates, modify existing questions, and provide the necessary form logic for the variety of scenarios in which the IIS system would be deployed. Feedback from the department's leadership and clinicians resulted in a number of changes, most notably being the ability to enter multiple diagnoses for a single injury event. Additionally, clinician feedback resulted in the creation of additional diagnostic codes not currently present in the OSIICS v14.0 diagnostic coding system, adding "non-sport" as an additional variable for injury setting, and developing a system for reporting return-to-sport date for time-loss injuries.
A multi-stage process of extensive planning, stakeholder feedback, and ongoing updates is required in order to successfully develop and implement an IIS system within a National Olympic and Paralynpic Committee. This process can be used to inform the development and implementation of IIS systems in other sporting organizations.
本报告旨在深入介绍和详细阐述为美国奥林匹克和残奥委员会(USOPC)开发和实施伤病监测(IIS)系统的相关情况。
IIS的开发和部署采用了多阶段方法。首先,研究人员根据2020年国际奥委会关于报告体育流行病学数据的共识声明中的建议,确定IIS中应包含的变量。其次,对托管和部署平台的适用性、易用性、灵活性以及后端数据结构(用于数据采集和汇总)进行了全面评估。第三,由运动医学部门领导和临床医生组成的焦点小组对IIS系统进行了试点,并根据他们的反馈进行了修订。然后在所有部门临床医生中对IIS进行试点测试并开展后续焦点小组讨论,以征求更多反馈并推动进一步修订。最后,在2023年泛美运动会和泛美残疾人运动会期间工作的供应商中对IIS系统进行试点,以完善该系统用于未来的赛事。在审查了所有潜在的软件平台选项(电子病历[EMR]系统、运动员管理系统、安全数据收集平台)后,选择了Qualtrics(Qualtrics,美国犹他州普罗沃)来托管IIS系统。做出这一选择是因为EMR和运动员管理系统无法频繁更新、修改现有问题,也无法为IIS系统将部署的各种场景提供必要的表单逻辑。部门领导和临床医生的反馈带来了一些变化,最显著的是能够为单个伤病事件输入多个诊断。此外,临床医生的反馈导致创建了OSIICS v14.0诊断编码系统中目前不存在的额外诊断代码,增加了“非运动”作为伤病环境的额外变量,并开发了一个用于报告失能伤病后恢复运动日期的系统。
为了在国家奥林匹克和残奥委员会内成功开发和实施IIS系统,需要进行广泛规划、利益相关者反馈和持续更新的多阶段过程。这一过程可用于为其他体育组织开发和实施IIS系统提供参考。