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Preventing Australian football injuries with a targeted neuromuscular control exercise programme: Comparative injury rates from a training intervention delivered in a clustered randomised controlled trial

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posted on 2025-02-25, 05:30 authored by CF Finch, DM Twomey, LV Fortington, TLA Doyle, BC Elliott, M Akram, DG Lloyd
BackgroundExercise-based training programmes are commonly used to prevent sports injuries but programme effectiveness within community men's team sport is largely unknown.ObjectiveTo present the intention-to-treat analysis of injury outcomes from a clustered randomised controlled trial in community Australian football.MethodsPlayers from 18 male, non-elite, community Australian football clubs across two states were randomly allocated to either a neuromuscular control (NMC) (intervention n=679 players) or standard-practice (control n=885 players) exercise training programme delivered as part of regular team training sessions (2× weekly for 8-week preseason and 18-week regular-season). All game-related injuries and hours of game participation were recorded. Generalised estimating equations, adjusted for clustering (club unit), were used to compute injury incidence rates (IIRs) for all injuries, lower limb injuries (LLIs) and knee injuries sustained during games. The IIRs were compared across groups with cluster-adjusted Injury Rate Ratios (IRRs).ResultsOverall, 773 game injuries were recorded. The lower limb was the most frequent body region injured, accounting for 50% of injuries overall, 96 (12%) of which were knee injuries. The NMC players had a reduced LLI rate compared with control players (IRR: 0.78 (95% CI 0.56 to 1.08), p=0.14.) The knee IIR was also reduced for NMC compared with control players (IRR: 0.50 (95% CI 0.24 to 1.05), p=0.07).ConclusionsThese intention-to-treat results indicate that positive outcomes can be achieved from targeted training programmes for reducing knee and LLI injury rates in men's community sport. While not statistically significant, reducing the knee injury rate by 50% and the LLI rate by 22% is still a clinically important outcome. Further injury reductions could be achieved with improved training attendance and participation in the programme.

History

Journal

Injury Prevention

Volume

22

Pagination

123-128

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1353-8047

eISSN

1475-5785

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

2

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group