AI Article Synopsis

  • Concussions are prevalent sport injuries that need proper care, with athletic trainers playing a crucial role in diagnosis and management.
  • Various challenges exist in sports settings that can negatively affect athletic trainers' decision-making regarding concussions, impacting prevention and athlete health.
  • A study analyzed factors influencing athletic trainers' decisions, highlighting that healthcare communication, self-efficacy, and employment setting significantly impact their intentions to make appropriate concussion-related choices.

Article Abstract

Concussions are a common sport-related injury that require appropriate initial care. Athletic trainers, often a primary source of healthcare for student-athletes, are key individuals involved in initial concussion diagnostic and management decisions. Challenges exist within the athletic environment that may hinder the consistency, efficacy, and/or effectiveness of concussion-related decision-making by athletic trainers, thereby impacting secondary concussion prevention and patient health. The purpose of this study was to identify factors that impact the intentions of athletic trainers to make appropriate concussion-related decisions under various circumstances. Overall, 1029 participants completed a survey examining educational precursors (quantity and quality of healthcare communication educational focus), demographic precursors (age, gender, educational degree, and employment setting), theory-based mediators (attitudes, perceived norms, and personal agency), and external mediators (knowledge, salience, and communication/collaboration practices) on appropriate concussion-related decision-making intentions. Data were analyzed using a two-step structural equation modeling approach. Quality of healthcare communication educational focus indirectly impacted appropriate concussion-related decision-making intentions via perceived behavioral control and communication/collaboration practices. Additionally, several factors impacted intentions to make appropriate concussion-related decisions directly including employment setting, self-efficacy, and general attitudes towards decision-making and concussions. Concussion prevention is aided by the initial and appropriate action taken by a healthcare professional to reduce immediate consequences; however, this action may be influenced by stakeholder relationships. These influential factors of decision-making may place athletes at further injury risk and negatively impact overall athlete health. As such, a sound theoretical framework incorporating the complexity of factors that may influence decision-making is needed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10815082PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21010082DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Concussions are prevalent sport injuries that need proper care, with athletic trainers playing a crucial role in diagnosis and management.
  • Various challenges exist in sports settings that can negatively affect athletic trainers' decision-making regarding concussions, impacting prevention and athlete health.
  • A study analyzed factors influencing athletic trainers' decisions, highlighting that healthcare communication, self-efficacy, and employment setting significantly impact their intentions to make appropriate concussion-related choices.
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Purpose: To systematically characterize and assess the effectiveness of multidisciplinary care for patients with persistent post-concussion symptoms (PPCS).

Materials And Methods: Only studies describing multidisciplinary treatment, defined as intervention provided by no less than 2 healthcare disciplines, each with independent scopes of practice, for patients with PPCS were considered.

Results: A total of 8 of the 1357 studies identified were included.

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Objective: Neuropsychologists commonly use a large battery of tests to inform clinical decisions. Decision analysis can be used to determine which individual tests play a role in the decision-making process. The objective of this project was to conduct quantitative and qualitative decision analysis of decisions by team neuropsychologists with professional hockey players being evaluated as part of the National Hockey League (NHL)/NHL Players Association Concussion Protocol.

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Background: Dangers of sports-related concussion are well documented, and those participating in sports involving significant contact are at an even higher risk relative to the general population. Despite extensive concussion education, athletes still make decisions that would be considered unsafe, such as underreporting and continuing to play despite experiencing symptoms. Although baseline testing is an increasingly common practice at all levels of sport, little is known about its ability to improve player safety perceptions.

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Early disclosure of possible concussive symptoms has the potential to improve concussion-related clinical outcomes. The objective of the present consensus process was to provide useful and feasible recommendations for collegiate athletic departments and military service academy leaders about how to increase concussion symptom disclosure in their setting. Consensus was obtained using a modified Delphi process.

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