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- Title
Epidemiology of physical activity‐related injuries in Chinese university students.
- Authors
Cai, Weicong; Gao, Lijie; Li, Liping; Gao, Yang; Jia, Cunxian; Yang, Wenda; Duan, Shiwei; Zhang, Hongjuan
- Abstract
Knowledge gaps of the physical activity‐related injury (PARI) problem among general undergraduates exist. We conducted a study in four universities, where 1421 students graded 1‐3 were interviewed face‐to‐face during April and May after their completion of the baseline survey in March and April 2017, aiming to describe the incidence and characteristics of PARI. PARI experience and physical activity (PA) participation in the past 12 months were collected. Injury incidence density (IID) and risk, and injury characteristics were evaluated for the overall sample and by gender. Pearson chi‐square or Fisher's exact tests and independent‐sample t tests were used to test between‐group differences. We found that 486 PARIs were reported totally by 289 participants, with an overall IID of 0.57 per 1000 hours of exposure (males: 1.07, females: 0.45) and an injury risk of 0.34 injuries/student/y (males: 0.52; females: 0.28). Higher IIDs were found in roller skating, football, and basketball. The majority of injuries occurred outdoors and involved the lower extremities, with sprain and strain being the primary injury types. Moreover, most injuries were new, acute, and happened in non‐contact situations. Of all injuries, 52.1% required medical attention and 64.6% resulted in inactivity of one or more days. Some significant differences were observed between males and females. Our study indicates that PARI is a public health concern among Chinese university students, which can provide direction for targeted prophylactic interventions to underpin the sex‐specific injury mechanism to reduce PARI.
- Subjects
CHINA; LEG injuries; SPORTS injuries risk factors; SPORTS injury prevention; PEARSON correlation (Statistics); T-test (Statistics); SOCCER; SPORTS injuries; INTERVIEWING; FISHER exact test; SYMPTOMS; CHI-squared test; SURVEYS; SPORTS participation; ATTENTION; COLLEGE students; BASKETBALL; SPRAINS; PUBLIC health; PHYSICAL activity; DISEASE incidence; ICE skating
- Publication
Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports, 2019, Vol 29, Issue 9, p1331
- ISSN
0905-7188
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/sms.13440