Injury incidence and severity in Chinese pre-professional dancers: A prospective weekly monitoring survey.

J Sci Med Sport

School of Sport, University of Wolverhampton, United Kingdom; National Institute of Dance Medicine and Science, United Kingdom. Electronic address: https://twitter.com/mattwyon.

Published: February 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess the frequency and severity of injuries among full-time Chinese pre-professional dancers through a weekly online survey conducted from September 2020 to July 2021.
  • A total of 450 dancers reported 1157 injuries, with a prevalence of 64.9% and an incidence rate of 5.51 injuries per 1000 hours of dancing; most injuries were classified as minor to moderate severity.
  • Findings indicated that female dancers faced a higher risk and severity of injuries compared to males, and university dancers experienced more injuries than adolescents, although the latter group suffered more moderate to severe injuries.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To determine dance injury incidence and severity in full-time Chinese pre-professional dancers.

Study Design: Prospective weekly online monitoring survey.

Methods: Respondents were asked to record all dance-injury incidences between September 2020 and July 2021 using a remote weekly self-report injury monitoring tool. An inclusive definition of injury was used in this study to record all injuries, even if they didn't cause a cessation of training. Data were excluded if respondents completed <90 % of the survey period and had over 3 consecutive weeks of missing data.

Results: 450 individuals from 11 different schools were included in the analyses. A total of 1157 injuries were reported over a 30-week academic year. Injury prevalence was 64.9 % and injury incidence was 5.51 injuries per 1000 h. Forty-eight percent of the injuries were minor severity and 41 % were of moderate severity, and the main injury sites were knees (0.89/1000 h), lower back (0.80/1000 h), feet (0.58/1000 h) and groin (0.56/1000 h). Female dancers reported significantly higher injury prevalence and injury incidence, and higher rates of moderate to severe injuries than males. The university group reported higher injury incidence than the adolescent group (p < 0.05), whereas the latter reported higher rates of moderate to severe injuries than the former (p < 0.001).

Conclusions: The injury incidence found in this study (5.1 injuries/1000 h) is higher than most previous sets of data. Female dancers are at a higher risk of injury and reported higher levels of injury severity than male dancers, especially for the female adolescent group.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsams.2023.09.021DOI Listing

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