| Literature DB >> 29316674 |
Aaron Joseph1, Amy Wiley2, Robin Orr3, Benjamin Schram4, J Jay Dawes5.
Abstract
The current literature suggests that load carriage can impact on a tactical officer's mobility, and that survival in the field may rely on the officer's mobility. The ability for humans to generate power and agility is critical for performance of the high-intensity movements required in the field of duty. The aims of this review were to critically examine the literature investigating the impacts of load carriage on measures of power and agility and to synthesize the findings. The authors completed a search of the literature using key search terms in four databases. After relevant studies were located using strict inclusion and exclusion criteria, the studies were critically appraised using the Downs and Black Checklist and relevant data were extracted and tabled. Fourteen studies were deemed relevant for this review, ranging in percentage quality scores from 42.85% to 71.43%. Outcome measures used in these studies to indicate levels of power and agility included short-distance sprints, vertical jumps, and agility runs, among others. Performance of both power and agility was shown to decrease when tactical load was added to the participants. This suggests that the increase in weight carried by tactical officers may put this population at risk of injury or fatality in the line of duty.Entities:
Keywords: agility; body armour; law enforcement; load; military; mobility; personal protective equipment; police; power; tactical
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29316674 PMCID: PMC5800187 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15010088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Databases and search terms used during literature search.
| Database | Search Terms |
|---|---|
| PUBMED (24 August 17) | ((“Military Personnel”[Mesh]) OR (“Law Enforcement”[Mesh]) OR (“Police”[Mesh]) OR (“Firefighters”[Mesh]) OR tactical OR military OR police OR firefight* OR “law enforcement”) AND (load* OR “body armor” OR “body armour” OR equipment) AND (power OR agility OR mobility OR sprint OR jump OR obstacle) |
| EMBASE (24 August 17) | (Load* OR Equipment OR “body armor” OR “body armour”) AND (Power OR Sprint OR “vertical jump” OR jump OR Agility OR “Obstacle course” OR mobility) AND (Tactical OR Military OR “military personnel” OR police OR officer* OR firefighter* OR “law enforcement” OR soldier* OR army OR navy) |
| CINAHL (24 August 17) | (Load* OR Equipment OR “body armor” OR “body armour”) AND (Power OR Sprint OR “vertical jump” OR jump OR Agility OR “Obstacle course” OR mobility) AND (Tactical OR Military OR “military personnel” OR police OR officer* OR firefighter* OR “law enforcement” OR soldier* OR army OR navy) |
| SPORTDiscus (24 August 17) | (Load* OR Equipment OR “body armor” OR “body armour”) AND (Power OR Sprint OR “vertical jump” OR jump OR Agility OR “Obstacle course” OR mobility) AND (Tactical OR Military OR “military personnel” OR police OR officer* OR firefighter* OR “law enforcement” OR soldier* OR army OR navy) |
* is part of the search terms and symbols. There is no actual meaning it just tells the search engine to look for any versions of that word.
Exclusion criteria and examples of excluded studies.
| Exclusion Criteria | Example |
|---|---|
| Study was not a new investigation | Study was a critical or systematic review |
| Study examined injuries of participants | Study predicted injury rate of participants by completing a power or agility outcome measure |
| Neither power nor agility were the primary outcome measure used in the study | Study examined effects of load on physiological responses such as VO2max or heart rate while utilizing a power or agility outcome measure |
| Participants were not wearing added load during the measurement of power or agility in the study | Study examined the effect of training with load on improvements of power and/or agility without load |
| Study investigated how to improve or predict load carrying ability | Study reported on how to improve load carrying ability through resistance or aerobic training |
| Investigations of reliability of outcome measures | Study investigated the reliability of a power or agility outcome measure through load bearing techniques |
Figure 1PRISMA diagram detailing the screening process of the literature review.
Participants, loading conditions, outcome measures, and main findings.
| Authors (Year) and Title | Participant Details | Loading Conditions | Outcome Measures Used | Main Findings | Critical Appraisal Score (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carlton et al. (2014) [ | Active officers of a police Tactical Operations Unit ( | Unloaded Body armour, helmet, primary (M4) and secondary (9 mm Glock) weapons (22.8 ± 1.8-kg) | 10-m in line sprint | No significant difference in 10-m Sprint ( | 67.85% |
| DeMaio et al. (2009) [ | Physically active volunteers from various U.S. Military Commands ( | Military issued battle dress uniforms + PPE system: 9.8 ± 0.9 kg | Shuttle Run 300-yd (274-m): 25-yd (23-m) repeats | Shuttle Run was significantly affected by added PPE ( | 42.85% |
| Dempsey et al. (2013) [ | New Zealand Southern Region District Police force ( | Unloaded | Acceleration Task—to simulate exiting a vehicle Maneuverability Task | Acceleration Task was significantly effected in loaded condition (+0.2-s, | 64.28% |
| Dempsey et al. (2014) [ | New Zealand Southern Region District Police force ( | Unloaded | Vertical Jump Height | There was a significant reduction in jump height when loaded ( | 64.28% |
| Hasselquist et al. (2008) [ | U.S. Army military personnel ( | Interceptor Body Armor tactical vest (including collar, groin protector, protective inserts) = 8.7 kg, 0.411 m2 coverage Three types of extremity armour: | 5 × 30-m Rushes | Rush and obstacle course performance scores were significantly poorer with the armour vest than without the armour vest. * | 57.14% |
| Holewijn and Lotens (1993) [ | Royal Netherlands Army infantry soldiers ( | Unloaded | Vertical Jump | Average loss of performance due to carriage of a mass of 16-kg: | 53.57% |
| Hunt et al. (2016) [ | Royal Australian Air Force Airfield Defence Guards ( | Weapon: 4.7-kg | Break Contact Simulation: | Break Contact Simulation: sprint duration increased by 0.8%/kg increase in external load. Increase in load lead to a significant increase in sprint duration and a sig decrease in peak velocity ( | 71.43% |
| Jaworski et al. (2015) [ | U.S. Marine Corps Infantry Battalions active duty military personnel ( | 4 Load Conditions: | Modified MANUF portion: | MANUF total time significantly increased with increasing load ( | 53.57% |
| Lewinski et al. (2015) [ | Law Enforcement Students | Training uniform and boots | 8 × max effort 9.1-m sprints, 1-min recovery (6 complete strides), 4 different starting positions: forwards, backwards, 90° turn to the left, 90° turn to the right | Overall performance decrease of 5% for stride velocity | 57.14% |
| Loverro et al. (2015) [ | Soldiers ( | IOTV Light: IOTV with soft armour only (4.8-kg) | Rush Task: | There was a significant effect of body armour on individual ( | 60.71% |
| Martin et al. (1985) [ | Penn State Army R.O.T.C students ( | Men ( | 25-yd Sprint | There was a 12.50%, 19.39%, 32.14%, 34.44% increase in general 25-yd sprint times for loaded conditions 2, 3, 4, 5, respectively, in comparison to loaded condition 1. | 53.57% |
| Pandorf et al. (2002) [ | Female Soldiers ( | Fighting load: battle dress uniform, boots, body armour, Kelvar helmet, equipment belt, load-carriage vest, dummy grenades, ammunition clips, M-16 rifle, 14.2 ± 0.59-kg | Hurdles: | There was a 25.93%, 11.76%, 17.05% decrease in performance for the hurdles, zigzag, and straight sprint, respectively, between fighting load and approach load. * | 60.71% |
| Taylor et al. (2016) [ | Active service soldiers ( | Control (tier-zero): 19.1-kg | Fire and Movement Simulation: | Time to complete the Fire and Movement Simulation was significantly slower in tiers-two, -three, -four than control, with tier-four also being sig. slower than tier-one ( | 50.00% |
| Treloar et al. (2011) [ | Soldiers (occupational specialties) ( | Unloaded | 5 × 30-m sprints at 44-s intervals—starting in the prone position | Additional load significantly increased mean 30-m sprint performance time by 31.5% ( | 53.57% |
* p-value was not reported.