Rehabilitation interventions need more than methodological standardisation: an individualised approach

Objectives: The main aim in the current study was to use a single-subject analysis to profile the physical performance characteristics of individuals within an injured group and a between-group approach to profile the group as a whole. These profiles were then used to inform single-subject and betwe...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine 2020-11, Vol.6 (1), p.e000899-e000899
Hauptverfasser: Welch, Neil, Richter, Chris, Moran, Kieran, Franklyn-Miller, Andy
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objectives: The main aim in the current study was to use a single-subject analysis to profile the physical performance characteristics of individuals within an injured group and a between-group approach to profile the group as a whole. These profiles were then used to inform single-subject and between-group rehabilitation interventions. Methods: Fifty-three (28 with athletic groin pain and 25 non-injured) Gaelic football players (24.8 years±7.1 years; 179 cm±5.5 cm; 79.7 kg±9.2 kg) underwent 3D biomechanical analysis, which was used to measure a series of physical performance characteristics. The non-injured group was used to create a ‘performance database’ to compare the injured individuals, and a between-group analysis was also conducted. The scores from each analysis were used to inform the targets of interventions. Results: The analysis highlighted the variety of profiles that existed across the tested individuals and that these profiles differed from that of the between-group analysis. By analysing individuals in a single-subject approach, detail can be seen that is lost with between-group analysis.
ISSN:2055-7647
2055-7647
DOI:10.1136/bmjsem-2020-000899