4 results match your criteria: "Swiss Golf Medical Center[Affiliation]"
BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med
July 2024
Golf Medical Center, Schulthess Klinik, Zurich, Switzerland.
Objectives: Our aims were (a) to describe the prevalence and incidence of self-reported injuries and illnesses of amateur golfers over a 5-month period and (b) to investigate potential risk factors for injury.
Methods: We recruited 910 amateur golfers (733 males [81%] and 177 females [19%]) from golf clubs in the USA and Switzerland. The median age was 60 (IQR: 47-67) and the median golfing handicap was 12 (IQR: 6-18).
Br J Sports Med
August 2021
Department of Family and Community Medicine, UAB, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
Br J Sports Med
October 2020
Swiss Golf Medical Center, Zurich, ZH, Switzerland.
Epidemiological studies of injury in elite and recreational golfers have lacked consistency in methods and definitions employed and this limits comparison of results across studies. In their sports-generic statement, the Consensus Group recruited by the IOC (2020) called for sport-specific consensus statements. On invitation by International Golf Federation, a group of international experts in sport and exercise medicine, golf research and sports injury/illness epidemiology was selected to prepare a golf-specific consensus statement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Sports Med
April 2020
Aspetar Sports Medicine and Orthopedic Hospital, Doha, Qatar.
Injury and illness surveillance, and epidemiological studies, are fundamental elements of concerted efforts to protect the health of the athlete. To encourage consistency in the definitions and methodology used, and to enable data across studies to be compared, research groups have published 11 sport-specific or setting-specific consensus statements on sports injury (and, eventually, illness) epidemiology to date. Our objective was to further strengthen consistency in data collection, injury definitions and research reporting through an updated set of recommendations for sports injury and illness studies, including a new Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) checklist extension.
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