Authors
Roald Bahr
Ben Clarsen
Wayne Derman
Jiri Dvorak
Carolyn Emery
Caroline Finch, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
Martin Hägglund
Astrid Junge
Simon Kemp
Karim M. Khan
Stephen W. Marshall
Willem Meeuwisse
Margo Mountjoy
John W. Orchard
Babette Pluim
Kenneth L. Quarrie
Bruce Reider
Martin Schwellnus
Torbjorn Soligard
Keith A. Stokes
Taoomas Timpka
Evert Verhagen
Abhinav Bindra
Rcihard Budgett
Lars Engebretsen
Ugur Erdener
Karim Charmari
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Title
British Journal of Sports Medicine
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group
School
School of Medical and Health Sciences
RAS ID
36219
Abstract
Injury and illness surveillance, and epidemiological studies, are fundamental elements of concerted efforts to protect the health of the athlete. To encourage consistency in the definitions and methodology used, and to enable data across studies to be compared, research groups have published 11 sport-specific or setting-specific consensus statements on sports injury (and, eventually, illness) epidemiology to date. Our objective was to further strengthen consistency in data collection, injury definitions and research reporting through an updated set of recommendations for sports injury and illness studies, including a new Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) checklist extension. The IOC invited a working group of international experts to review relevant literature and provide recommendations. The procedure included an open online survey, several stages of text drafting and consultation by working groups and a 3-day consensus meeting in October 2019. This statement includes recommendations for data collection and research reporting covering key components: defining and classifying health problems; severity of health problems; capturing and reporting athlete exposure; expressing risk; burden of health problems; study population characteristics and data collection methods. Based on these, we also developed a new reporting guideline as a STROBE Extension -the STROBE Sports Injury and Illness Surveillance (STROBE-SIIS). The IOC encourages ongoing in-and out-of-competition surveillance programmes and studies to describe injury and illness trends and patterns, understand their causes and develop measures to protect the health of the athlete. Implementation of the methods outlined in this statement will advance consistency in data collection and research reporting. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020.
DOI
10.1136/bjsports-2019-101969
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 License
Comments
Bahr, R., Clarsen, B., Derman, W., Dvorak, J., Emery, C., Finch, C., ... & Chamari, K., (2020). International Olympic Committee consensus statement: methods for recording and reporting of epidemiological data on injury and illness in sport 2020 (including STROBE Extension for Sport Injury and Illness Surveillance (STROBE-SIIS)). British Journal of Sports Medicine, 54(7), 372-389. https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2019-101969