The burden of hospitalized sports-related injuries in children: an Australian population-based study, 2005–2013
Abstract Background There is concern about recent increase and severity of sports-related injuries in children. Despite the benefits of sports participation, injuries may carry long-term health consequences. We aimed to evaluate the prevalence, characteristics and types of hospitalized sports-relate...
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doaj-9e6c873d11b74e84879eef899987444e2020-11-25T02:51:49ZengBMCInjury Epidemiology2197-17142018-12-015111010.1186/s40621-018-0175-6The burden of hospitalized sports-related injuries in children: an Australian population-based study, 2005–2013Francisco J. Schneuer0Jane C. Bell1Susan E. Adams2Julie Brown3Caroline Finch4Natasha Nassar5Child Population and Translational Health Research, The Children’s Hospital at Westmead Clinical School, Level 2 The Hub, Charles Perkins Centre D17, The University of SydneyChild Population and Translational Health Research, The Children’s Hospital at Westmead Clinical School, Level 2 The Hub, Charles Perkins Centre D17, The University of SydneyInjury Prevention, Neuroscience Research AustraliaInjury Prevention, Neuroscience Research AustraliaAustralian Centre for Research into Injury in Sport and its Prevention (ACRISP), Edith Cowan UniversityChild Population and Translational Health Research, The Children’s Hospital at Westmead Clinical School, Level 2 The Hub, Charles Perkins Centre D17, The University of SydneyAbstract Background There is concern about recent increase and severity of sports-related injuries in children. Despite the benefits of sports participation, injuries may carry long-term health consequences. We aimed to evaluate the prevalence, characteristics and types of hospitalized sports-related injuries in children. Methods Population-based study of all acute sports-related injuries requiring hospitalization in children 5 to 15 years of age in New South Wales (NSW), Australia, 2005–2013. Health information was obtained from the NSW Admitted Patient Data Collection, a census of all hospital admissions from public and private hospitals. Children with a recorded ICD10-AM injury code (S00-T79) and sport-related activity code (U50-U70) were included. Prevalence and trend in injuries by age group, sporting code, body region affected and type of injury were assessed. Results There was a total of 20,034 hospitalizations for sports-related injuries (2.7% of all hospitalizations in children aged 5–15 years), involving 21,346 recorded injuries in 19,576 children. The overall population hospitalization period prevalence was 227 per 100,000 children aged 5–15 years in 2005–2013, remaining stable over time (RR 0.99; 95% CI 0.98–1.00). Football codes such as rugby league/union and soccer combined represented nearly two thirds of the total (60%). The most common body regions affected were the forearm (31%) head (15%) and hand injuries (13%). Fractures accounted for 65% of injuries followed by dislocations (10%) and traumatic brain injury (10%). Compared to other age groups, children aged 5–8 years had double the proportion of shoulder (15% vs. 7%) while 13–15 year olds had higher proportion of lower-leg (14% vs. 8%) and knee (6% vs.2%) injuries. One in seven injuries sustained while playing rugby league/union, baseball and hockey were traumatic brain injuries. A total of 444 (2.2%) of children had more than one hospitalization for sports-related injuries. Conclusion On average, six children were hospitalized every day for sports-related injuries in the last decade with trends remaining stable. The most common sports involved were football codes, one in three injuries involved the forearm and two thirds were fractures. These findings can be used to inform health policy and sporting governing bodies to target preventive interventions and promote safe sports participation in children.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40621-018-0175-6Sports-related injuriesChildren and adolescent sportsEpidemiologyHospital admissionsTraumatic brain injury |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Francisco J. Schneuer Jane C. Bell Susan E. Adams Julie Brown Caroline Finch Natasha Nassar |
spellingShingle |
Francisco J. Schneuer Jane C. Bell Susan E. Adams Julie Brown Caroline Finch Natasha Nassar The burden of hospitalized sports-related injuries in children: an Australian population-based study, 2005–2013 Injury Epidemiology Sports-related injuries Children and adolescent sports Epidemiology Hospital admissions Traumatic brain injury |
author_facet |
Francisco J. Schneuer Jane C. Bell Susan E. Adams Julie Brown Caroline Finch Natasha Nassar |
author_sort |
Francisco J. Schneuer |
title |
The burden of hospitalized sports-related injuries in children: an Australian population-based study, 2005–2013 |
title_short |
The burden of hospitalized sports-related injuries in children: an Australian population-based study, 2005–2013 |
title_full |
The burden of hospitalized sports-related injuries in children: an Australian population-based study, 2005–2013 |
title_fullStr |
The burden of hospitalized sports-related injuries in children: an Australian population-based study, 2005–2013 |
title_full_unstemmed |
The burden of hospitalized sports-related injuries in children: an Australian population-based study, 2005–2013 |
title_sort |
burden of hospitalized sports-related injuries in children: an australian population-based study, 2005–2013 |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
Injury Epidemiology |
issn |
2197-1714 |
publishDate |
2018-12-01 |
description |
Abstract Background There is concern about recent increase and severity of sports-related injuries in children. Despite the benefits of sports participation, injuries may carry long-term health consequences. We aimed to evaluate the prevalence, characteristics and types of hospitalized sports-related injuries in children. Methods Population-based study of all acute sports-related injuries requiring hospitalization in children 5 to 15 years of age in New South Wales (NSW), Australia, 2005–2013. Health information was obtained from the NSW Admitted Patient Data Collection, a census of all hospital admissions from public and private hospitals. Children with a recorded ICD10-AM injury code (S00-T79) and sport-related activity code (U50-U70) were included. Prevalence and trend in injuries by age group, sporting code, body region affected and type of injury were assessed. Results There was a total of 20,034 hospitalizations for sports-related injuries (2.7% of all hospitalizations in children aged 5–15 years), involving 21,346 recorded injuries in 19,576 children. The overall population hospitalization period prevalence was 227 per 100,000 children aged 5–15 years in 2005–2013, remaining stable over time (RR 0.99; 95% CI 0.98–1.00). Football codes such as rugby league/union and soccer combined represented nearly two thirds of the total (60%). The most common body regions affected were the forearm (31%) head (15%) and hand injuries (13%). Fractures accounted for 65% of injuries followed by dislocations (10%) and traumatic brain injury (10%). Compared to other age groups, children aged 5–8 years had double the proportion of shoulder (15% vs. 7%) while 13–15 year olds had higher proportion of lower-leg (14% vs. 8%) and knee (6% vs.2%) injuries. One in seven injuries sustained while playing rugby league/union, baseball and hockey were traumatic brain injuries. A total of 444 (2.2%) of children had more than one hospitalization for sports-related injuries. Conclusion On average, six children were hospitalized every day for sports-related injuries in the last decade with trends remaining stable. The most common sports involved were football codes, one in three injuries involved the forearm and two thirds were fractures. These findings can be used to inform health policy and sporting governing bodies to target preventive interventions and promote safe sports participation in children. |
topic |
Sports-related injuries Children and adolescent sports Epidemiology Hospital admissions Traumatic brain injury |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40621-018-0175-6 |
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