بيانات النشر: Linköpings universitet, Avdelningen för prevention, rehabilitering och nära vård
Linköpings universitet, Medicinska fakulteten
McMaster Univ, Canada
Arsenal Football Club, England; Edinburgh Napier Univ, Scotland
Federat Internatl Football Assoc, Switzerland
Aspetar Orthopaed & Sports Med Hosp, Qatar; Univ Amsterdam, Netherlands
Norwegian Sch Sports Sci, Norway; Aspetar Orthopaed & Sports Med Hosp, Qatar
Univ Fed Minas Gerais, Brazil; CNPq Brazil, Brazil
Isokinet FIFA Med Ctr Excellence, Italy
Japan Football Assoc Clin, Japan
Liverpool John Moores Univ, England
Axis Sports Med, New Zealand
Univ Pretoria, South Africa
Football Australia, Australia; Australian Profess Leagues, Australia
Norwegian Sch Sports Sci, Norway; Norwegian FA Med Ctr, Norway
BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
نبذة مختصرة : Several sports have published consensus statements on methods and reporting of epidemiological studies concerning injuries and illnesses with football (soccer) producing one of the first guidelines. This football-specific consensus statement was published in 2006 and required an update to align with scientific developments in the field. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) recently released a sports-generic consensus statement outlining methods for recording and reporting epidemiological data on injury and illness in sport and encouraged the development of sport-specific extensions.The Federation Internationale de Football Association Medical Scientific Advisory Board established a panel of 16 football medicine and/or science experts, two players and one coach. With a foundation in the IOC consensus statement, the panel performed literature reviews on each included subtopic and performed two rounds of voting prior to and during a 2-day consensus meeting. The panel agreed on 40 of 75 pre-meeting and 21 of 44 meeting voting statements, respectively. The methodology and definitions presented in this comprehensive football-specific extension should ensure more consistent study designs, data collection procedures and use of nomenclature in future epidemiological studies of football injuries and illnesses regardless of setting. It should facilitate comparisons across studies and pooling of data.
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