Schulz Jenna M, Pohlod Lois, Myers Samantha, Chung Jason, Thornton Jane S
Department of Family Medicine, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, Western University, London, ON N6G 2M1, Canada; Fowler-Kennedy Sport Medicine Clinic, Western University, London, ON N6A 3K7, Canada; Bone & Joint Institute, Western University, London, ON N6A 3K7, Canada.
Clinical Masters in Sport and Exercise Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, Western University, London, ON N6A 5B9, Canada.
J Sport Health Sci. 2024 Sep 6;14:100981. doi: 10.1016/j.jshs.2024.100981.
Preparticipation examinations (PPEs) are unstandardized screening tools routinely used to collect an athlete's baseline health information prior to the start of a new competitive season. However, many PPEs include minimal and often nonspecific questions related to the health concerns of female athletes. A lack of female athlete specific health questions could result in missed red flags and subsequent injury or illness. As such, the objectives of this scoping review were to (a) determine what female athlete specific health questions currently exist in PPEs in the scientific literature to prevent injury and illness, and (b) map the results against the health domains outlined in the International Olympic Committee (IOC) consensus statement supplement on the female athlete.
We searched Embase, Scopus, CINAHL, Medline Ovid, and SPORTDiscus from inception to December 2022. Any study with female athlete specific health PPE questions or recommendations for questions (i.e., menstrual health, eating habits, musculoskeletal health, etc.) was included. Three reviewers independently screened titles and abstracts, followed by full text articles for eligibility and data extraction, with conflicts resolved by a third-party reviewer. Extracted data were summarized into 3 determined groupings.
Of the 1356 studies screened, 41 were included in this study. Forty studies (98%) included questions/recommendations related to menstrual health. Thirty-one studies (76%) had questions/recommendations concerning disordered eating/eating habits. Twenty-four studies (59%) referred to body weight/image, and 16 studies (39%) referred to musculoskeletal health. No studies included questions on all IOC female athlete health domains.
There is currently a gap in female athlete specific health content included in PPEs. A more comprehensive, standardized PPE with a focus on inclusion of female athlete specific health questions and considerations should be developed to improve health and optimal participation of female athletes around the world.
参赛前检查(PPE)是一种未标准化的筛查工具,通常用于在新的竞技赛季开始前收集运动员的基线健康信息。然而,许多参赛前检查包含的与女运动员健康问题相关的内容极少且往往缺乏特异性。缺少针对女运动员的特定健康问题可能导致遗漏危险信号,进而引发受伤或患病。因此,本范围综述的目的是:(a)确定科学文献中参赛前检查目前存在哪些针对女运动员的特定健康问题,以预防受伤和患病;(b)根据国际奥委会(IOC)关于女运动员的共识声明补充文件中概述的健康领域对结果进行梳理。
我们检索了自建库至2022年12月的Embase、Scopus、CINAHL、Medline Ovid和SPORTDiscus数据库。纳入任何包含针对女运动员的特定健康参赛前检查问题或问题建议(即月经健康、饮食习惯、肌肉骨骼健康等)的研究。三名评审员独立筛选标题和摘要,随后对全文进行资格筛选和数据提取,如有冲突则由第三方评审员解决。提取的数据被总结为3个确定的分组。
在筛选的1356项研究中,本研究纳入了41项。40项研究(98%)包含与月经健康相关的问题/建议。31项研究(76%)有关于饮食失调/饮食习惯的问题/建议。24项研究(59%)涉及体重/身体形象,16项研究(39%)涉及肌肉骨骼健康。没有研究涵盖国际奥委会所有女运动员健康领域的问题。
目前参赛前检查中针对女运动员的特定健康内容存在空白。应制定一个更全面、标准化的参赛前检查,重点纳入针对女运动员的特定健康问题和考量因素,以改善全球女运动员的健康状况并使其能更好地参与比赛。