AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the ability of sports medicine physicians to identify and report cases of harassment and abuse in sports, highlighting the need for better education on this issue.
  • Conducted in 2023, the survey involved 406 physicians from 115 countries and revealed that while participants acknowledged the harmfulness of harassment and abuse, many felt uncomfortable reporting it and lacked knowledge on how to proceed.
  • Significant barriers to reporting included confidentiality concerns, fear of reprisals, and insufficient training, with a majority of respondents expressing a desire for more educational resources in safeguarding practices.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To assess the clinical competence of sports medicine physicians to recognise and report harassment and abuse in sports, and to identify barriers to reporting and the need for safeguarding education.

Methods: We implemented a cross-sectional cohort study design recruiting through social media and international sports medicine networks in 2023. The survey captured participant perceptions related to the harmfulness of harassment and abuse. The survey incorporated the reasoned action approach as a theoretical framework to design survey questions to identify attitudes and self-efficacy to detect and report suspicions of harassment and abuse and to identify barriers to reporting.

Results: Sports medicine physicians (n=406) from 115 countries completed the survey. The situations of harassment and abuse presented in the survey were described by sports medicine physicians as having occurred in the 12 months before participating in the survey. Despite recognising the situations as harmful, sports medicine physicians were somewhat uncomfortable being vigilant for the signs and symptoms and reporting suspicions and disclosures of harassment and abuse (M=2.13, SD=0.67). In addition, just over one-quarter (n101, 26.9%) was unaware of where to report harassment and abuse, and over half did not know (n114, 28.1%), or were uncertain (n95, 23.4%) of who the safeguarding officer was in their sports organisation. Participants identified many barriers to reporting harassment and abuse, including concerns regarding confidentiality, misdiagnosis, fear of reprisals, time constraints and lack of knowledge. Over half felt insufficiently trained (n223, 57.6%), and most respondents (n=324, 84.6%) desired more education in the field.

Conclusions: Educational programmes to better recognise and report harassment and abuse in sports are needed for sports medicine trainees and practising clinicians. An international safeguarding code for sports medicine physicians should be developed.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2024-108210DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

harassment abuse
36
sports medicine
32
medicine physicians
24
sports
12
abuse sports
12
report harassment
12
harassment
9
abuse
9
medicine
8
recognise report
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!