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Sports injuries in an accident and emergency department.

Version 2 2024-06-03, 18:35
Version 1 2017-07-26, 14:08
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 18:35 authored by David WattersDavid Watters, S Brooks, RA Elton, K Little
Over a one year period, 2270 sports injuries were seen in the Accident and Emergency Department at the Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh. This represented 3.9% of the total new patients seen in that year. Football and rugby were the most frequent sports responsible for injury. Seventy-eight per cent of injured persons were 26 or under and 88.7% of injuries occurred in men. The two months with the most sports injuries were September and February; 74% (1683) patients stated they trained at least once a week and 85% (1895) played the sport in which they were injured at least once a week. Players who did not train were less likely to incur a severe injury than those who did. Fourteen per cent of the injuries were the result of foul play, but again foul play was less likely to cause a serious injury; 41% of injuries were to the lower limb; 45% of injuries were fractures, dislocations, lacerations and head injuries; 7% of patients required admission to hospital and 22% were referred to a clinic. Seventy-seven per cent of the referrals were to the orthopaedic department. The relevance of these figures to the accident and emergency workload is discussed.

History

Journal

Archives of emergency medicine

Volume

1

Pagination

105-111

Location

England

ISSN

0264-4924

Language

eng

Publication classification

CN.1 Other journal article

Issue

2

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing Inc.

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