Abstract
Safety in sports and physical activity is an important prerequisite for continuing participation in sports, as well as for maintenance of a healthy physically active lifestyle. For this reason, prevention, reduction and control of sports injuries are important goals for society as a whole. Recent advances in sports medicine discuss the need for research on real-life injury prevention. Such views call for a more behavioural approach when it comes to actual sports injury prevention. Nevertheless, the role of behaviour in sports injury prevention remains under-researched. In order to push the field of sports injury prevention forward, this article provides an overview of the relationship between behaviour and sports injury risk.
Different types of behaviour relate to injury risk factors and injury mechanisms. Behaviour that influences risk factors and injury mechanisms is not confined only to the athlete. Various types of behaviour by, for example, the coach, referee, physical therapist or sports associations, also influence risk factors and injury mechanisms. In addition, multiple behaviours often act together. Some types of behaviour may directly affect injury risk and are by definition a risk factor. Other behaviours may only affect risk factors and injury mechanisms, and influence injury risk indirectly.
Recent ideas on injury prevention that call for studies on real-life injury prevention still rely heavily on preventive measures that are established through efficacy research.A serious limitation in such an approach is that one expects that proven preventive measures will be adopted if the determinants and influences of sports safety behaviours are understood. Therefore, if one truly wants to prevent sports injuries in a real-life situation, a broader research focus is needed. In trying to do so, we need to look at lessons learned from other fields of injury prevention research.
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Acknowledgements
All of the authors contributed equally to this article. Evert Verhagen was involved in the conceptualization and writing of the first draft of the article. Maartje van Stralen and Willem van Mechelen were involved in further developing the idea and finalization of the article. All authors contributed to the final article by reading and correcting the draft versions. All authors declare that they have no competing interests. No sources of funding were used to assist in the preparation of this article.
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Verhagen, E.A.L.M., van Stralen, M.M. & van Mechelen, W. Behaviour, the Key Factor for Sports Injury Prevention. Sports Med 40, 899–906 (2010). https://doi.org/10.2165/11536890-000000000-00000
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.2165/11536890-000000000-00000