1. Trends in match concussion incidence and return-to-play time in male professional Rugby Union: A 16-season prospective cohort study.
- Author
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West, Stephen W, Cross, Matthew, Trewartha, Grant, Taylor, Aileen, Brooks, John, Kemp, Simon, Locke, Duncan, Ahmed, Osman, and Stokes, Keith
- Subjects
SPORTS participation ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,TIME ,DISEASE incidence ,BRAIN concussion ,DISEASE prevalence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SPORTS events ,RUGBY football injuries ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
To describe trends in the incidence of match concussions and time to return-to-play in professional rugby union. Match concussion incidence (injuries per 1000 player-match-hours) and time to return-to-play (mean and median days absence) were recorded in 3006 male professional rugby union players over 16 seasons (2002/03 – 2018/19). From 2002/03 to 2009/10, incidence of concussions was stable at 4.3/1000 player-match-hours. From 2009/10 to 2018/19, there was an increase in concussion incidence, with the highest incidence in 2016/17 at 20.9/1000 player-match-hours (95% CI: 17.9–24.3). Annual prevalence of concussion also increased, suggesting more players were concussed rather than the same players sustaining more concussions. Before the introduction of standardized graduated return-to-play (GRTP) guidelines in 2011, 27% of players returned to play in <6 days. After the introduction of the GRTP, this decreased to 7%, with no players returning in <6 days after 2014/15. Between 2002/03 and 2018/19, incidence of all other injuries remained stable. From 2009/10 onwards, the incidence of diagnosed concussions increased. Since the introduction of the GRTP, there has been a dramatic reduction in the number of players returning in <6 days. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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