Illness and infection in elite full-contact football-code sports: A systematic review |
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Authors: | Lucy Chesson Sarah Whitehead Kirsten Flanagan Kevin Deighton Jamie Matu Susan H. Backhouse Ben Jones |
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Affiliation: | 1. Leeds Beckett University, Carnegie Applied Rugby Research (CARR) Centre, Carnegie School of Sport, United Kingdom;2. Leeds Rhinos Rugby League Club, United Kingdom;3. Leeds Rhinos Netball, United Kingdom;4. Delta Hat Limited, United Kingdom;5. Leeds Beckett University, School of Clinical and Applied Sciences, United Kingdom;6. England Performance Unit, The Rugby Football League, United Kingdom;7. School of Science and Technology, University of New England, Australia;8. Division of Exercise Science and Sports Medicine, Department of Human Biology, Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Cape Town and the Sports Science Institute of South Africa, South Africa |
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Abstract: | ObjectivesFull-contact football-code team sports offer a unique environment for illness risk. During training and match-play, players are exposed to high-intensity collisions which may result in skin-on-skin abrasions and transfer of bodily fluids. Understanding the incidence of all illnesses and infections and what impact they cause to time-loss from training and competition is important to improve athlete care within these sports. This review aimed to systematically report, quantify and compare the type, incidence, prevalence and count of illnesses across full-contact football-code team sports.Design/methodsA systematic search of Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, SPORTDiscus, PsycINFO and CINAHL electronic databases was performed from inception to October 2019; keywords relating to illness, athletes and epidemiology were used. Studies were excluded if they did not quantify illness or infection, involve elite athletes, investigate full-contact football-code sports or were review articles.ResultsTwenty-eight studies met the eligibility criteria. Five different football-codes were reported: American football (n = 10), Australian rules football (n = 3), rugby league (n = 2), rugby sevens (n = 3) and rugby union (n = 9). One multi-sport study included both American football and rugby union. Full-contact football-code athletes are most commonly affected by respiratory system illnesses. There is a distinct lack of consensus of illness monitoring methodology.ConclusionsFull-contact football-code team sport athletes are most commonly affected by respiratory system illnesses. Due to various monitoring methodologies, illness incidence could only be compared between studies that used matching incidence exposure measures. High-quality illness surveillance data collection is an essential component to undertake effective and targeted illness prevention in athletes. |
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Keywords: | Epidemiology Athletes Respiratory tract infections Incidence Prevalence |
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