Evaluating the Implementation of Injury Prevention Strategies in Rugby Union and League: A Systematic Review using the RE-AIM Framework
Abstract Rugby (union and league) has come under intense scrutiny due to its injury risk. Various interventions have been introduced to protect players from injury, with many deemed efficacious and advocated for use across various worldwide contexts. However, their implementation is less clear. The...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of sports medicine 2021-02, Vol.42 (2), p.112-121 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract
Rugby (union and league) has come under intense scrutiny due to its injury risk.
Various interventions have been introduced to protect players from injury, with
many deemed efficacious and advocated for use across various worldwide contexts.
However, their implementation is less clear. The objective of this systematic
review was to determine whether injury prevention interventions in rugby have
evaluated their ‘
reach
’,
‘
effectiveness
’, ‘
adoption
’,
‘
implementation
’ and
‘
maintenance
’ as per the RE-AIM Multi-Dimension Item
Checklist. Six electronic databases were searched in November 2019. Inclusion
criteria included: English language, peer-reviewed journal article, original
research, field-based rugby code, prospective intervention. Of the 4253 studies
identified, 74 met the full inclusion criteria. Protective equipment,
predominately mouthguards, was the intervention of interest in 44 studies. Other
interventions included multimodal national injury prevention programmes, law
changes and neuromuscular training programmes. ‘Effectiveness’
was the highest scoring RE-AIM dimension (55%), followed by
‘reach’ (26%). All other RE-AIM dimensions scored below
20%. Research currently focuses on determining intervention
‘effectiveness’. For injury prevention strategies to have their
desired impact, there must be a shift to address all determinants associated
with implementation. Consideration should be given to how this can be achieved
by adopting specific reporting checklists, research frameworks and study
designs. |
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ISSN: | 0172-4622 1439-3964 |
DOI: | 10.1055/a-1212-0649 |