55 results on '"Drew, Michael K."'
Search Results
2. 735 FO40 – Health is a priority in high-performance pathway systems: system-wide stakeholder insights into athlete attrition
3. Gender and socioecological level differences in stakeholders' perceptions of athlete attrition factors in an Australian high-performance pathway system
4. Alternative Reimbursement Models for Health Providers in High-Performance Sport: Stakeholder Experiences and Perceptions
5. Health Systems in High-Performance Sport: Key Functions to Protect Health and Optimize Performance in Elite Athletes
6. Alternative reimbursement models for health providers in high performance sport: stakeholder experiences and perceptions
7. What Contributes to Athlete Performance Health? A Concept Mapping Approach
8. Stakeholder insights into athlete attrition in the high-performance pathway
9. Design of the performance outcome scoring template (POS-T) with example application on CO2 emissions reduction amongst 36 OECD member countries
10. Stressed and Not Sleeping: Poor Sleep and Psychological Stress in Elite Athletes Prior to the Rio 2016 Olympic Games
11. Despite maintaining a high daily training availability, a quarter of athletes start the season injured and three quarters experience injury in an Australian State Academy of Sport
12. Epidemiology of injuries sustained in professional Australian netball: a three season cohort study
13. Sleep Quality in Elite Athletes: Normative Values, Reliability and Understanding Contributors to Poor Sleep
14. Trustworthy performance evaluations: The Performance Outcome Scoring Template (POS-T) for transparent assessments in real-world programs
15. The Utility of the Low Energy Availability in Females Questionnaire to Detect Markers Consistent With Low Energy Availability-Related Conditions in a Mixed-Sport Cohort
16. Male basketball players who report hip and groin pain perceive its negative impact both on- and off-court: A cross-sectional study
17. Impaired recovery is associated with increased injury and illness: A retrospective study of 536 female netball athletes
18. Spatial muscle activation patterns during different leg exercise protocols in physically active adults using muscle functional MRI: a systematic review
19. Thirty-seven jump-landing biomechanical variables are associated with asymptomatic patellar tendon abnormality and patellar tendinopathy: A systematic review
20. A prospective study of health problems at the 2018 17/U and 19/U Australian National Netball Championships with comparison of surveillance methodology
21. Jump‐landing mechanics in patellar tendinopathy in elite youth basketballers
22. Epidemiology of bone stress injuries in Australian high performance athletes: A retrospective cohort study
23. Epidemiology of elite sprint kayak injuries: A 3-year prospective study
24. Injury prevention strategies specific to pre-elite athletes competing in Olympic and professional sports — A systematic review
25. Subsequent Injury Risk Is Elevated Above Baseline After Return to Play: A 5-Year Prospective Study in Elite Australian Football
26. Comparison of subsequent injury categorisation (SIC) models and their application in a sporting population
27. A 2-Year Prospective Study of Injury Epidemiology in Elite Australian Rugby Sevens: Exploration of Incidence Rates, Severity, Injury Type, and Subsequent Injury in Men and Women
28. Knee flexion not hip extension strength is persistently reduced following hamstring strain injury in Australian Football athletes: Implications for Periodic Health Examinations
29. Improvement of Prediction of Noncontact Injury in Elite Australian Footballers With Repeated Exposure to Established High-Risk Workload Scenarios
30. Rating of perceived exertion is a stable and appropriate measure of workload in judo
31. Knee flexion strength is significantly reduced following competition in semi-professional Australian Rules football athletes: Implications for injury prevention programs
32. An Updated Subsequent Injury Categorisation Model (SIC-2.0): Data-Driven Categorisation of Subsequent Injuries in Sport
33. Use of a tibial accelerometer to measure ground reaction force in running: A reliability and validity comparison with force plates
34. Multivariate modelling of subjective and objective monitoring data improve the detection of non-contact injury risk in elite Australian footballers
35. Higher chronic loads before returning to training accelerate return to play time but lead to higher reinjury rates following lower limb muscle injury in elite Australian football players
36. A systematic review of prospective epidemiological research into injury and illness in Olympic combat sport
37. Is subsequent lower limb injury associated with previous injury? A systematic review and meta-analysis
38. A multifactorial evaluation of illness risk factors in athletes preparing for the Summer Olympic Games
39. Australian football players experiencing groin pain exhibit reduced subscale scores of Activities of Daily Living and Sport and Recreation on the HAGOS questionnaire: A case-control study
40. What is the most accurate and reliable methodological approach for predicting peak height velocity in adolescents? A systematic review
41. Risky business: An example of what training load data can add to shared decision making in determining ‘acceptable risk’
42. Exercise Interventions for the Prevention and Treatment of Groin Pain and Injury in Athletes: A Critical and Systematic Review
43. Injuries impair the chance of successful performance by sportspeople: a systematic review
44. Who ‘owns’ the injury or illness? Who ‘owns’ performance? Applying systems thinking to integrate health and performance in elite sport
45. Performance success or failure is influenced by weeks lost to injury and illness in elite Australian track and field athletes: A 5-year prospective study
46. Do Australian Football players have sensitive groins? Players with current groin pain exhibit mechanical hyperalgesia of the adductor tendon
47. Sports-related workload and injury risk: simply knowing the risks will not prevent injuries: Narrative review
48. It's not the destination, it's the ‘road to load’ that matters: a tennis injury prevention perspective
49. Normative MRI, ultrasound and muscle functional MRI findings in the forearms of asymptomatic elite rowers
50. The Relationship Between Training Load and Injury, Illness and Soreness: A Systematic and Literature Review
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