Jewell Carley B, Caron Jeffrey G, Pope J Paige, Rathwell Scott
Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education, University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, AB, Canada.
Department of Kinesiology, Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, Brock University, St. Catharines, ON, Canada.
J Sport Rehabil. 2024 Oct 28;34(3):249-263. doi: 10.1123/jsr.2024-0002. Print 2025 Mar 1.
Social support is an important consideration during athletes' rehabilitation following a concussion. Yet, its influence during the return-to-sport (RTS) strategy has been underexplored.
Concussed athletes' experiences with social support during RTS were explored prospectively using an explanatory sequential mixed methods design.
University rugby, basketball, and track and field athletes (N = 8) from a single Canadian institution, 19-23 years of age (mean = 20.63, SD = 1.51), completed concentric circles maps, the Perceived Available Support in Sport Questionnaire, and 2 semistructured interviews during their RTS. We analyzed concentric circles maps and questionnaire data descriptively and interview data using codebook thematic analysis.
Athletes identified 16 different social support agents. The 5 most important agents during RTS were athletic therapists, student therapists, head coaches, significant others, and teammates/friends. Significant others provided the most emotional (mean = 2.82, SD = 1.85) and esteem (mean = 2.63, SD = 1.85) support, and the athletic therapist (mean = 1.82, SD = 1.35) and head coaches (mean = 0.93, SD = 1.19) provided the most informational and tangible support. We generated 4 themes from athletes' interviews: social support behaviors, contextual factors, concussion and RTS factors, and psychological readiness factors.
The number of social support agents present, frequency of support types, and demonstration of support behaviors decreased across the concussion RTS strategy. Contextual (ie, toughness), concussion (ie, visibility), and RTS (ie, prognosis uncertainty) factors influenced athletes' perceptions of social support agents' support behaviors. Results add to our limited understanding of athletes' social support during RTS following a concussion and suggest exploring the integration of behavior-specific (eg, checking in, providing reassurance, and demonstrating compassion) social support strategies to promote concussion rehabilitation and readiness to RTS.
社会支持是运动员脑震荡康复过程中的一个重要考量因素。然而,其在恢复运动(RTS)策略中的影响尚未得到充分研究。
采用解释性序列混合方法设计,前瞻性地探索脑震荡运动员在RTS过程中获得社会支持的经历。
来自加拿大一所大学的橄榄球、篮球和田径运动员(N = 8),年龄在19 - 23岁之间(平均 = 20.63,标准差 = 1.51),在RTS期间完成了同心圆图、运动中感知到的可用支持问卷以及两次半结构化访谈。我们对同心圆图和问卷数据进行描述性分析,并使用编码本主题分析法对访谈数据进行分析。
运动员识别出16种不同的社会支持主体。在RTS期间最重要的5个主体是运动治疗师、学生治疗师、主教练、重要他人以及队友/朋友。重要他人提供了最多的情感支持(平均 = 2.82,标准差 = 1.85)和自尊支持(平均 = 2.63,标准差 = 1.85),运动治疗师(平均 = 1.82,标准差 = 1.35)和主教练(平均 = 0.93,标准差 = 1.19)提供了最多的信息支持和实际支持。我们从运动员的访谈中提炼出4个主题:社会支持行为、背景因素、脑震荡和RTS因素以及心理准备因素。
在脑震荡RTS策略中,社会支持主体的数量、支持类型的频率以及支持行为的表现均有所下降。背景因素(即坚韧)、脑震荡因素(即可见性)和RTS因素(即预后不确定性)影响了运动员对社会支持主体支持行为的认知。研究结果增加了我们对脑震荡后RTS期间运动员社会支持的有限理解,并建议探索整合特定行为(如询问情况、给予安慰和表达同情)的社会支持策略,以促进脑震荡康复和为RTS做好准备。