Medical planning for a marathon requires an understanding of the volumes and types of injuries experienced by runners during a race. This chart review of medical records from the 2018 Bank of America Chicago Marathon (N = 1016) measured volume and types of injuries at the race aid stations to determine the impact that race distance has on medical resource utilization. The type and volume of each injured runner diagnosis was compared between quartiles of the race using a chisquare analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis pictorial review can help you advise patients on how to reduce pain and increase ROM, strength, and balance following acute injury or in chronic impairment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is overwhelming evidence in the scientific and medical literature that physical inactivity is a major public health problem with a wide array of harmful effects. Over 50% of health status can be attributed to unhealthy behaviors with smoking, diet, and physical inactivity as the main contributors. Exercise has been used in both the treatment and prevention of a variety of chronic conditions such as heart disease, pulmonary disease, diabetes, and obesity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhysically active health care providers are more likely to provide physical activity (PA) counseling to their patients, but barriers in PA counseling exist. Common barriers include knowledge, time constraints, lack of reimbursement, as well as lack of personal habits. This article will summarize evidence-based knowledge regarding provider PA habits as a means of improving rapport, compliance, and empathy for patients when prescribing PA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAthletes are susceptible to many acute illnesses that can interfere with their ability to train and compete as well as potentially affecting teammates and coaching staff. A solid understanding of the preventive measures, diagnosis, and management of such diseases is paramount in the care of an athletic population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSports Health
September 2011
Background: Marathon running has become popular, particularly among inexperienced runners.
Hypothesis: Many marathoners are inexperienced and lack concern for potential complications of marathon running.
Study Design: Cross-sectional survey.
Athletes are susceptible to the same infections as the general population. However, special considerations often need to be taken into account when dealing with an athlete who has contracted an infectious disease. Health care providers need to consider how even common illnesses can affect an athlete's performance, the communicability of the illness to team members, and precautions/contraindications related to athletic participation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn sports, wrist and hand injuries are commonplace. Too often, injuries to these areas can be under-treated and left for further complications to arise. While some injuries to the wrist and hand can be treated conservatively with immediate return to play, others require a more in-depth assessment prior to return to play.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Sports Med Rep
July 2009
In preparing for medical coverage of a mass participation event such as a marathon, race directors and their medical staff members need to account for the unexpected. Extremes in weather as well as the potential for outside threats need to be given consideration before race day in order to adequately prepare. Through the recruitment of local expertise from various agencies in one's community during both the planning stages, and on race day, the added stressors of such extremes will be minimized, if not eliminated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Sports Med Rep
August 2008
The competitive sport of figure skating has changed in many ways over the last few decades with the advent of increasingly difficult programs, the additions of new disciplines within the sport, and changes to the types of injuries seen. With increased numbers of participants, there is more need for medical coverage at many skating events throughout the country. The sports medicine physician responsible for the care of skaters at a competition will need a working knowledge of the basics of skating and the injuries these athletes sustain in order to provide exceptional care to the skaters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne must remember that the first marathon runner, Phidippides, collapsed and died at the finish of his race. Fortunately, death has been an infrequent occurrence in modern day marathons. However, the physical exertion required to complete a marathon coupled with exposure to often harsh environmental conditions and an increase in the number of novice participants makes injuries inevitable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhysical inactivity is a growing epidemic in industrialized nations, contributing to the increasing prevalence and worsening of many chronic disease processes such as diabetes mellitus, cerebral vascular disease, and depression. It is well recognized that certain subpopulations are less likely to partake in physical activity than the population at large. Many minority populations, especially those of lower socioeconomic status, and women and children within these groups, are the most likely to be inactive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe threatened airway is, fortunately, an infrequent occurrence in sports medicine, but one that requires up-to-date knowledge and skill in order to be managed in an effective and timely manner. Sports medicine physicians are responsible for having the education and tools required to secure a compromised airway in any setting. Often, careful positioning of the athlete with simple maneuvers learned through basic life support training is all that is necessary to secure the airway.
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