Determining the index of injuries requiring specialist treatment during boulder climbing on an artificial climbing wall

Introduction: Climbing was accepted as the official discipline at the Olympic Games in Tokyo in 2020. It is a sport that is becoming one of the most popular from extreme sports. The aim of the study is to assess the climbers' reported injuries during bouldering climbing, requiring specialized t...

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Main Authors: Grzegorz Zieliński, Estera Zięba, Michał Ginszt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Kazimierz Wielki University 2019-09-01
Series:Journal of Education, Health and Sport
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ojs.ukw.edu.pl/index.php/johs/article/view/7368
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spelling doaj-3f90954b27954fbe999c44a4e074fc672020-11-25T01:44:00ZengKazimierz Wielki UniversityJournal of Education, Health and Sport2391-83062019-09-0199909310.5281/zenodo.33843496475Determining the index of injuries requiring specialist treatment during boulder climbing on an artificial climbing wallGrzegorz Zieliński0Estera Zięba1Michał Ginszt2Chair and Department of Rehabilitation, Physiotherapy, and Balneotherapy, Medical University of LublinChair and Department of Rehabilitation, Physiotherapy, and Balneotherapy, Medical University of LublinChair and Department of Rehabilitation, Physiotherapy, and Balneotherapy, Medical University of LublinIntroduction: Climbing was accepted as the official discipline at the Olympic Games in Tokyo in 2020. It is a sport that is becoming one of the most popular from extreme sports. The aim of the study is to assess the climbers' reported injuries during bouldering climbing, requiring specialized treatment (calls to the emergency medical team, hospitalization, surgical sewing). Material and methods: Materials for analysis were made available by the Climbing Center. Climbers were registered in the period from November 2018. until August 2019. All climbers expressed a conscious desire to participate in climbing classes, knew the risks associated with practicing the sport and took full responsibility for their activities, which was confirmed in writing. The trained staff was present during all climbing classes. Results: Data were collected for 272 days, during which the climbing wall was open 1805 hours. At that time, 4,315 people with diverse experience climbed it. Three injuries requiring intervention of the emergency medical team and hospitalization were registered. This represents 1.66 injuries per 1000 hours of climbing and 0.7 injuries per 1000 people. Conclusions: • Bouldering climbing on an artificial wall is characterized by an injury index requiring specialized treatment in the value of 1.66 injury per 1000 hours of climbing. • Further studies should also focus on comparing different extreme disciplines in terms of injury rates. • Further studies on the frequency of injuries in climbing should be characterized by a normalized system of assessment of injuries and time of event registration depending on the type of discipline (difficulty climbing, bouldering), location (hall, rock climbing) and season.http://www.ojs.ukw.edu.pl/index.php/johs/article/view/7368climbingboulderinginjuriesaccidentsindicator
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Grzegorz Zieliński
Estera Zięba
Michał Ginszt
spellingShingle Grzegorz Zieliński
Estera Zięba
Michał Ginszt
Determining the index of injuries requiring specialist treatment during boulder climbing on an artificial climbing wall
Journal of Education, Health and Sport
climbing
bouldering
injuries
accidents
indicator
author_facet Grzegorz Zieliński
Estera Zięba
Michał Ginszt
author_sort Grzegorz Zieliński
title Determining the index of injuries requiring specialist treatment during boulder climbing on an artificial climbing wall
title_short Determining the index of injuries requiring specialist treatment during boulder climbing on an artificial climbing wall
title_full Determining the index of injuries requiring specialist treatment during boulder climbing on an artificial climbing wall
title_fullStr Determining the index of injuries requiring specialist treatment during boulder climbing on an artificial climbing wall
title_full_unstemmed Determining the index of injuries requiring specialist treatment during boulder climbing on an artificial climbing wall
title_sort determining the index of injuries requiring specialist treatment during boulder climbing on an artificial climbing wall
publisher Kazimierz Wielki University
series Journal of Education, Health and Sport
issn 2391-8306
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Introduction: Climbing was accepted as the official discipline at the Olympic Games in Tokyo in 2020. It is a sport that is becoming one of the most popular from extreme sports. The aim of the study is to assess the climbers' reported injuries during bouldering climbing, requiring specialized treatment (calls to the emergency medical team, hospitalization, surgical sewing). Material and methods: Materials for analysis were made available by the Climbing Center. Climbers were registered in the period from November 2018. until August 2019. All climbers expressed a conscious desire to participate in climbing classes, knew the risks associated with practicing the sport and took full responsibility for their activities, which was confirmed in writing. The trained staff was present during all climbing classes. Results: Data were collected for 272 days, during which the climbing wall was open 1805 hours. At that time, 4,315 people with diverse experience climbed it. Three injuries requiring intervention of the emergency medical team and hospitalization were registered. This represents 1.66 injuries per 1000 hours of climbing and 0.7 injuries per 1000 people. Conclusions: • Bouldering climbing on an artificial wall is characterized by an injury index requiring specialized treatment in the value of 1.66 injury per 1000 hours of climbing. • Further studies should also focus on comparing different extreme disciplines in terms of injury rates. • Further studies on the frequency of injuries in climbing should be characterized by a normalized system of assessment of injuries and time of event registration depending on the type of discipline (difficulty climbing, bouldering), location (hall, rock climbing) and season.
topic climbing
bouldering
injuries
accidents
indicator
url http://www.ojs.ukw.edu.pl/index.php/johs/article/view/7368
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