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Showing items 1 - 3 of 3

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  • 1117 Public Health and Health Services
  • Fortington, Lauren
  • Football
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2No 1Yes
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2Finch, Caroline 1Bekker, Sheree 1Carey, David 1Cook, Jill 1Docking, Sean 1Donaldson, Alex 1Gabbe, Belinda 1Lathlean, Tim 1Lloyd, David 1Rio, Ebonie 1Young, Warren
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11116 Medical Physiology 1AFL 1Athletic injury 1Exercise therapy 1Fatalities 1Injury 1Injury prevention 1Media 1Mortality 1Prevention 1Sport 1Sports medicine 1Tendinopathy 1Tendon pathology 1UTC
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Full Text
2No 1Yes
Creator
2Finch, Caroline 1Bekker, Sheree 1Carey, David 1Cook, Jill 1Docking, Sean 1Donaldson, Alex 1Gabbe, Belinda 1Lathlean, Tim 1Lloyd, David 1Rio, Ebonie 1Young, Warren
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11116 Medical Physiology 1AFL 1Athletic injury 1Exercise therapy 1Fatalities 1Injury 1Injury prevention 1Media 1Mortality 1Prevention 1Sport 1Sports medicine 1Tendinopathy 1Tendon pathology 1UTC
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Quantification of Achilles and patellar tendon structure on imaging does not enhance ability to predict self-reported symptoms beyond grey-scale ultrasound and previous history

- Docking, Sean, Rio, Ebonie, Cook, Jill, Carey, David, Fortington, Lauren

  • Authors: Docking, Sean , Rio, Ebonie , Cook, Jill , Carey, David , Fortington, Lauren
  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Journal article
  • Relation: Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport Vol. 22, no. 2 (2019), p. 145-150
  • Full Text: false
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Background: Tendon pathology on imaging has been associated with an increased risk of developing symptoms. This evidence is based on classifying the tendon as normal or pathological. It is unclear whether the extent of tendon pathology is associated with the development or severity of symptoms. Objectives: To investigate whether the presence and extent of tendon pathology on ultrasound tissue characterisation (UTC), or a previous history of symptoms, were associated with the development of symptoms over a football season. Methods: 179 male Australian football players underwent UTC imaging of their Achilles and/or patellar tendon at the start of the pre-season. Players completed monthly OSTRC overuse questionnaires to quantify the presence and severity of Achilles and/or patellar tendon symptoms. Risk factor analysis was performed to identify associations between imaging and the development of symptoms. Results: A pathological Achilles tendon increased the risk of developing symptoms (RR = 3.2, 95%CI 1.7–5.9). Conversely, a pathological patellar tendon was not significantly associated with the development of symptoms (RR = 1.8, 95%CI 0.9–3.7). Quantification of tendon structure using UTC did not enhance the ability to identify athletes who developed symptoms. Previous history of symptoms was the strongest predictor for the development of symptoms (Achilles RR = 3.0 95%CI 1.8–4.8; patellar RR = 3.7 95%CI 2.2–6.1). Conclusion: Tendon pathology was associated with the development of self-reported symptoms; however previous history of symptoms was a stronger risk factor. The extent of disorganisation quantified by UTC should not be used as a marker for the presence or severity of current and future symptoms.

Online news media reporting of football-related fatalities in Australia : A matter of life and death

- Fortington, Lauren, Bekker, Sheree, Finch, Caroline

  • Authors: Fortington, Lauren , Bekker, Sheree , Finch, Caroline
  • Date: 2017
  • Type: Text , Journal article
  • Relation: Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport Vol. 21, no. 3 (2017), p. 245-249
  • Full Text: false
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Objectives: While deaths in sports settings are rare, they do occur. To develop an understanding of the sports and people most at risk, and to identify opportunities for prevention, routine and systematic data detailing the occurrence of these fatalities is required. There is currently no routine reporting of data of this nature in Australia. As there is often strong community interest in these incidents, the media offers an opportunity for surveillance. However before this can occur, understanding of the terminology used by the media is required. The aim of this study was to identify the terminology most frequently used in online Australian news media coverage of football-related deaths. Design: Retrospective review of online news media. Methods: Three databases were searched for online news media reports of people who died while participating in football (all football codes) in Australia. A descriptive analysis of terminology was undertaken to identify the common language applied. Results: Thirty-four football-related fatalities in Australia were identified between 2010-2016, via 149 separate articles. The most frequent terms identified in the media items were: Family; Club; Rugby; Football; Player; League; Died; Game; Death; Life; Loved; Hospital; Match; Young; Community; Playing; Friends; Sport; Heart; AFL [Australian Football League]. Conclusions: This study identified terminology used in reporting football-related fatalities in Australia, identifying common reference to terms relating to 'death' as metaphors and the frequent celebration of 'life.' The findings suggest that a reliance on researcher-generated terminology will be insufficient to reflect media discourse in prospective monitoring of sports deaths for surveillance.
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When 'just doing it' is not enough: Assessing the fidelity of player performance of an injury prevention exercise program

- Fortington, Lauren, Donaldson, Alex, Lathlean, Tim, Young, Warren, Gabbe, Belinda, Lloyd, David, Finch, Caroline


  • Authors: Fortington, Lauren , Donaldson, Alex , Lathlean, Tim , Young, Warren , Gabbe, Belinda , Lloyd, David , Finch, Caroline
  • Date: 2014
  • Type: Text , Journal article
  • Relation: Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport Vol. 18, no. 3 (May 2014 2014), p.272-277
  • Relation: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/565907
  • Relation: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/1058737
  • Relation: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/565900
  • Full Text:
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Objectives: To obtain benefits from sports injury prevention programs, players are instructed to perform the exercises as prescribed. We developed an observational checklist to measure the quality of exercise performance by players participating in FootyFirst, a coach-led, exercise-based, lower-limb injury prevention program in community Australian Football (AF). Design: Observational. Methods: The essential performance criteria for each FootyFirst exercise were described in terms of the technique, volume and intensity required to perform each exercise. An observational checklist was developed to evaluate each criterion through direct visual observation of players at training. The checklist was trialled by two independent raters who observed the same 70 players completing the exercises at eight clubs. Agreement between observers was assessed by Kappa-statistics. Exercise fidelity was defined as the proportion of observed players who performed all aspects of their exercises correctly. Results: The raters agreed on 61/70 observations (87%) (Kappa = 0.72, 95% CI: 0.55; 0.89). Of the observations with agreed ratings, 41 (67%) players were judged as performing the exercises as prescribed. Conclusions: The observational checklist demonstrated high inter-rater reliability. Many players observed did not perform the exercises as prescribed, raising concern as to whether they would be receiving anticipated program benefits. Where quality of exercise performance is important, evaluation and reporting of program fidelity should include direct observations of participants.

When 'just doing it' is not enough: Assessing the fidelity of player performance of an injury prevention exercise program

  • Authors: Fortington, Lauren , Donaldson, Alex , Lathlean, Tim , Young, Warren , Gabbe, Belinda , Lloyd, David , Finch, Caroline
  • Date: 2014
  • Type: Text , Journal article
  • Relation: Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport Vol. 18, no. 3 (May 2014 2014), p.272-277
  • Relation: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/565907
  • Relation: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/1058737
  • Relation: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/565900
  • Full Text:
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Objectives: To obtain benefits from sports injury prevention programs, players are instructed to perform the exercises as prescribed. We developed an observational checklist to measure the quality of exercise performance by players participating in FootyFirst, a coach-led, exercise-based, lower-limb injury prevention program in community Australian Football (AF). Design: Observational. Methods: The essential performance criteria for each FootyFirst exercise were described in terms of the technique, volume and intensity required to perform each exercise. An observational checklist was developed to evaluate each criterion through direct visual observation of players at training. The checklist was trialled by two independent raters who observed the same 70 players completing the exercises at eight clubs. Agreement between observers was assessed by Kappa-statistics. Exercise fidelity was defined as the proportion of observed players who performed all aspects of their exercises correctly. Results: The raters agreed on 61/70 observations (87%) (Kappa = 0.72, 95% CI: 0.55; 0.89). Of the observations with agreed ratings, 41 (67%) players were judged as performing the exercises as prescribed. Conclusions: The observational checklist demonstrated high inter-rater reliability. Many players observed did not perform the exercises as prescribed, raising concern as to whether they would be receiving anticipated program benefits. Where quality of exercise performance is important, evaluation and reporting of program fidelity should include direct observations of participants.

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