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USING NATIONAL CORONIAL DATA TO IDENTIFY PRIORITIES FOR PREVENTING DEATH IN SPORT/RECREATION

journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-26, 03:59 authored by Andrew McIntosh, Lauren Fortington, Declan Patton, Caroline Finch
BackgroundDeaths relating to sport/recreation are thought to be rare. However, in Australia, a lack of published data has limited our understanding of the number of deaths in different sports and settings.ObjectiveTo gain a first understanding of the number/cause of deaths across different sports/recreation activities in Australia.DesignA case-series analysis was undertaken using the National Coronial Information System (NCIS) in Australia.SettingAll sport and physical recreation activities in Australia as coded in the NCIS, including recreational and professional participants.PatientsCases are ‘closed’ NCIS cases of all ages who died in the period 2000 to 2016 as a result of participating in sport and physical recreation. Cases were selected from NCIS activity level one categories – Sport and Exercise During Leisure Time, Education, Leisure or Play and Paid Work.InterventionsNone.Main Outcome MeasurementsThe number of deaths by sport/recreation activity and associated demographic data (e.g. sex, age). The cause, mechanism of injury and contributing factors are explored.Results5060 cases were included. The three most frequent activities were “Individual water sports” (42%), “Individual athletic activities” (9%) and “wheeled non-motor sports” (7%). Combined, team bat/stick and team ball sports contributed 7% of cases. Males accounted for 88% of cases. The proportion of deaths by age increased from 4% in 5–14 year olds, peaked at 19% in 45–54 year olds, before declining. The most common causes were identified as cardiac-related (39%), drowning (34%) and blunt force trauma (19%.)ConclusionsThere is demonstrable evidence from other injury settings for data to inform safety measures that can prevent fatalities. These results provide a first understanding of the people/activities most often impacted by death in different sports settings across Australia. With this information, leading activity contexts and causes will be explored to identify common mechanisms and potential prevention priorities and strategies.

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Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • No

Language

eng

Publication classification

E3.1 Extract of paper

Journal

British Journal of Sports Medicine

Volume

51

Pagination

360-360

ISSN

0306-3674

eISSN

1473-0480

Issue

4

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group

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