1. Resilience, well-being, depression symptoms and concussion levels in equestrian athletes.
- Author
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McGivern, Annika, Shannon, Stephen, and Breslin, Gavin
- Subjects
MENTAL depression risk factors ,PSYCHOLOGY of athletes ,WELL-being ,CROSS-sectional method ,EQUESTRIANISM ,SPORTS injuries ,MENTAL health ,RISK assessment ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SURVEYS ,MENTAL depression ,BRAIN concussion ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to conduct the first cross-sectional survey on depression, Resilience, well-being, depression symptoms and concussion levels in equestrian athletes and to assess whether past concussion rates were associated with depression, resilience and well-being. Design/methodology/approach: In total, 511 participants from Canada, Republic of Ireland, UK, Australia and USA took part in an international cross-sectional, online survey evaluating concussion history, depression symptoms, resilience and well-being. Findings: In total, 27.1% of athletes met clinically relevant symptoms of major depressive disorder. Significant differences were shown in the well-being and resilience scores between countries. Significant relationships were observed between reported history of concussion and both high depression scores and low well-being scores. Practical implications: Findings highlight the need for mental health promotion and support in equestrian sport. Social implications: Results support previous research suggesting a need for enhanced mental health support for equestrians. There is reason to believe that mental illness could still be present in riders with normal levels of resilience and well-being. Originality/value: This study examined an understudied athlete group: equestrian athletes and presents important findings with implications for the physical and mental health of this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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