1. Changes in Patient-Reported Outcome Measures From the Time of Injury to Return to Play in Adolescent Athletes at Secondary Schools With an Athletic Trainer
- Author
-
Thomas P. Dompier, Janet E. Simon, Aristarque Djoko, Alison R. Snyder Valier, Stephen W. Marshall, and Zachary Y. Kerr
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Trainer ,Poison control ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Context (language use) ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Injury prevention ,Humans ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Prospective Studies ,Students ,Original Research ,030222 orthopedics ,Schools ,biology ,Athletes ,business.industry ,Human factors and ergonomics ,030229 sport sciences ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Faculty ,Return to Sport ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Lower Extremity ,Athletic Injuries ,Physical therapy ,business ,Sports - Abstract
Context Typically, athletic trainers rely on clinician-centered measures to evaluate athletes' return-to-play status. However, clinician-centered measures do not provide information regarding patients' perceptions. Objective To determine whether clinically important changes in patient-reported outcomes were observed from the time of lower extremity injury to the time of return to play in adolescent athletes. Design Cross-sectional study. Setting The National Athletic Treatment, Injury and Outcomes Network (NATION) program has captured injury and treatment data in 31 sports from 147 secondary schools across 26 states. A subsample of 24 schools participated in the outcomes study arm during the 2012−2013 and 2013−2014 academic years. Patients or Other Participants To be included in this report, student-athletes must have sustained a knee, lower leg, ankle, or foot injury that restricted participation from sport for at least 3 days. A total of 76 initial assessments were started by athletes; for 69 of those, return-to-play surveys were completed and analyzed. Main Outcome Measure(s) All student-athletes completed generic patient-reported outcome measures (Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System [PROMIS] survey, Global Rating of Change scale, and Numeric Pain Rating Scale) and, depending on body region, completed an additional region-specific measure (Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score or Foot and Ankle Ability Measure). All applicable surveys were completed at both the initial and return-to-play time points. Means and standard deviations for the total scores of each patient-reported outcome measure at each time point were calculated. Change scores that reflected the difference from the initial to the return-to-play time points were calculated for each participant and compared with established benchmarks for change. Results The greatest improvement in patient-reported outcomes was in the region-specific forms, with scores ranging from 9.92 to 37.73 on the different region-specific subscales (Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score or Foot and Ankle Ability Measure; scores range from 0−100). The region-specific subscales on average still showed a 21.8- to 37.5-point deficit in reported health at return to play. The PROMIS Lower Extremity score increased on average by 13 points; all other PROMIS scales were within normative values after injury. Conclusions Adolescent athletes who were injured at a high school with an athletic trainer may have shown improvement in patient-reported outcomes over time, but when they returned to play, their outcome scores remained lower than norms from comparable athlete groups.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF