| Literature DB >> 32231790 |
Geordie McLeod1, Siobhán O'Connor2, Damian Morgan3, Alex Kountouris4, Caroline F Finch1, Lauren V Fortington1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aim was to identify and describe outcomes from original published studies that present the number, nature, mechanism and severity of medically treated injuries sustained in community-level cricket.Entities:
Keywords: cricket; injuries; sports
Year: 2020 PMID: 32231790 PMCID: PMC7101051 DOI: 10.1136/bmjsem-2019-000670
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med ISSN: 2055-7647
Figure 1Search and study selection flow chart.
Critical appraisal of studies
| Item | Study (first author and year) | |||||||
| Perera, | Finch, | Walker, | King, | Upadhyay, | Forward, | Overall % of yes | ||
| Likelihood of bias* | Low | Low | Low | Unclear | Unclear | High | ||
| 1 | Were the study aims and design described adequately and are they compatible? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | 83 |
| 2 | Was the study setting, subjects, source, target population and size described adequately? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Partial | 67 |
| 3 | Was the method of data collection described adequately and did it seek to minimise information bias? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Yes | Partial | 67 |
| 4 | Has there been appropriate reporting of attrition of subjects or missing data? | Yes | Partial | Partial | Partial | Partial | Partial | 17 |
| 5 | Was there an injury definition and/or injury severity measure/definition provided and were they suitable for the study design? | Yes | Partial | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | 67 |
| 6 | Were the injury outcomes and exposure measures reported in a standardised, justified and reasonable manner? | Partial | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 83 |
| 7 | Were limitations to the study discussed adequately? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | 67 |
| 8 | Is there a summary of key results, their potential generalisability and whether they and any conclusions match the aims and/or reflect the limitations of the study? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | 83 |
| 9 | Does the study explain any ethics requirements, author conflicts of interest and/or funding arrangements? | Yes | Partial | Yes | Yes | No | No | 50 |
*Items 2, 3 and 4 (shaded) used to assess the likelihood of bias.
Study characteristics and injury outcomes from five original studies of medical-attention injuries in community cricket (n=6)
| First author, year (reference) | Setting/context and aims | Overall participants (n), age, sex | Injury data collection methods | Injury definition, | No of injured (np) and injuries (ni) | EM, incidence/prevalence | Nature of injuries | Body region/part injured | Mechanism of injuries | Severity of injuries | Other information |
| Perera, 2019 | A comprehensive profile of hospital-treated cricket injuries sustained by female cricketers in Victoria, Australia, from 2002/2003 to 2013/2014. | n=668 cases overall with 547 ED presentations and 121 HA | Data sourced from Victorian Injury Surveillance Unit which collects ED data under the Victorian Emergency Minimum Dataset and HA data under the Victorian Admitted Episode Dataset | ED presentation or HA. | ED np=547 | Per 1000 participants | HA: | HA: | HA: | HA: | |
| King, 2018 | Provide retrospective analysis of moderate to serious injury and serious injury claims and related costs for five sporting codes using national insurance claims (ACC) in New Zealand from 2012 to 2016. | n=853 to 324 claims from which | Retrospective analysis of data from ACC for 5 years from 2012 to 2016 | Any injury which qualified for a moderate to serious injury or serious injury claim. | np cricket related: moderate to serious injury claims=3072, serious injury claims=15 | EM=NR | Moderate to serious claims: | Moderate to serious claims: | NR | 3072 moderate to serious claims. | Cricket ranked fifth for total moderate to serious injury claims but third for mean cost per claim. |
| Walker, 2010 | Hospitalisation of cricket players in NZ from 2000 to 2005 inclusive. | n=498 cases | Retrospective analysis of NZ’s National Minimum Dataset of public and private hospitals | ICD-10-AM codes for case hospitalised for at least one night, including bystanders injured as a direct result of cricket activity. | np=ni=498 | EM=1 00 000 people/year and 100 000 participants/year. | Fracture: 218 (44%) | Head and neck: 114 (23%)—28 fractures, 11 open wounds, 10 concussions | Exposure to inanimate mechanical forces: 240 (48%) —of these 144 (60%) were hit by ball and 33 (14%) hit by bat. | 20 (4%) cases were classified as serious non-fatal, 11 due to being struck by bat or ball, 6 due to collisions with other players, 2 from falls and 1 from overexertion. | For children under 10 years who were injured under exposure to inanimate mechanical forces, 25 (72%) were struck by the bat. |
| Upadhyay, 2000 | Emergency presentations to Starship Children’s Hospital Auckland, NZ. Describe the nature of injuries sustained by children playing cricket from 1993 to April 1998. | n=60 cases | Retrospective review of existing data | Injury secondary to playing cricket under ICD code E-8897 | np=ni=60 | EM=NR | Fracture: 26 (43.3%) | Head/face and neck: 16 (26.7%) | Hit by ball: 31 (51.6%) | Two injuries were severe, both blunt abdominal trauma. | Not applicable |
| Finch, 1998 | ED presentations of sports injuries in selected parts of Australia for the period 1989–1993. Describe sports injury cases presented to selected hospital EDs and redress the lack of community-based information on sports injury in Australia. | n=5 16 221 | Data collected from 74 public hospitals and medical centres on standardised collection forms throughout Australia | NR | np(children)=1945 | EM=NR | Children/adult: | Children/adults: | Head and facial injuries generally associated with hits with the ball or bat | 8.2% of ED presentations for children were admitted to hospital. | Not applicable |
| Forward, 1988 | Review indoor cricket injuries presenting to ED of Royal Perth Hospital, Australia, over a 6-month period. (Published in 1988—no reference to dates investigated.) | n=64 cases | Recording of all indoor cricket injuries presenting in ED | NR (all indoor cricket-related injuries) | np=64 | EM=NR | Fractures: 19–22 (includes three bruised or fractured ribs) | Head and neck: 14—eye injuries 6 (43%), supraorbital ridge 4 (29%), nasal bone 3 (21%) | Batters most often struck on fingers by ball | No time off work: 19% | Activity at onset: |
*There is some disparity in the reported figures of the number of serious for cricket-related injury (reported in different tables as n=15 and n=27).
ACC, Accident Compensation Corporation; ED, emergency department; EM, exposure measure; F, female; ICD-10-AM, 10th edition of the Australian Modification to the International Classification of Diseases; ICISS, International Classification Injury Severity Score; IIR, Injury Incidence Rate; M, male; NISU, National Injury Surveillance Unit; NR, not reported; NZ, New Zealand; PPE, personal protective equipment; SM, severity measure.
Injury nature for studies reporting medical-attention injury in community cricket (ED presentations unless otherwise noted)
| First author, year (reference) | No of injuries | Age range | Concussion/closed head intracranial injury or seizure | Superficial injury | Eye injury | Fracture | Avulsion | Injury to muscle and tendon or rupture/tear | Internal organ injury | Open wound/laceration | Soft tissue | Sprain | Strain | Bruising | Overuse | Inflammation* | Abrasion/friction burn | Other/NR |
| Perera, 2019 | HA: 121 | 5–45+ years | – | 5.0% | – | 47.1% | † | 6.6% | – | – | – | 18.2%† | – | – | – | – | 23.1% | |
| ED: 547 | 5–45+ years | 1.6% | 14.6% | 2.9% | 17.2% | † | 6.9% | – | 8.4% | – | 36.4%† | – | – | – | – | 11.9% | ||
| King, 2018 | 3087** | 0–85+ years | 1.7% | – | – | 30.9% | – | – | – | 1.9% | 64.1% | – | - | – | 0.5% | – | – | 0.9% |
| Walker, 2010 | HA: 498 | 2–80 years | 5.0%‡ | – | – | 43.8% | 6.2% | 3.6% | – | 2.4% | – | – | 15.2% | 5.4% | – | – | – | 18.1% |
| Upadhyay, 2000 | 60 | 9–13 years | 13.3% | – | – | 43.3% | – | – | 13.3% | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 30.1% | |
| Finch, 1998 | 2345 | <15 years | – | – | – | 17.8% | – | – | – | 17.8% | – | 12.4%§ | 30.2% | – | – | 2.9% | 11.4% | |
| 3846 | ≥15 years | – | – | – | 20.7% | – | – | – | 11.2% | – | 26.0%§ | 19.6% | – | – | 1.2% | 11.5% | ||
| Forward, 1988 | 65 | 19–34 years | 1.5% | – | 9.2% | 33.8%¶ | 10.8% | – | – | 6.2% | – | 15.4% | – | 6.2% | – | – | 6.2% | 10.7% |
*Includes pain and swelling.
†Dislocation, sprain and strain were combined.
‡Includes 2.2% seizures.
§Sprain and strain combined.
¶Includes bruised ribs as three cases were classifiedas bruised or fractured.
**Insurance claims.
ED, emergency department presentations; HA, hospital admission; NR, not reported.
Percentage of body regions for medical-attention injuries in community cricket
| First author, year (reference) | No of injuries | Head/face/neck | Upper limb | Trunk/back | Lower limb | Unspecified |
| Perera, 2019 | ||||||
| HA | 121 | 28.1 | 33.9 | – | 28.1 | 9.9 |
| ED | 547 | 27.8 | 38.9 | 1.1 | 26.1 | 6.1 |
| King, 2018 | 3087* | 7.4 | 35.2 | 2.3 | 45.5 | 9.6 |
| Walker, 2010 | 498 | 22.9 | 35.7 | 2.8 | 31.3 | 7.3 |
| Upadhyay, 2000 | 60 | 26.7 | 30.0 | 13.3 | NR | 30.0 |
| Finch, 1998 | ||||||
| Ages <15 years | 2345 | 44.2 | 33.9 | 3.2 | 15.5 | 11.4 |
| Ages ≥15 years | 3846 | 16.6 | 32.6 | 4.2 | 22.8 | 11.5 |
| Forward, 1988 | 65 | 21.5 | 46.2 | 4.6 | 27.7 | 0.0 |
*Number of claims (there were no ‘multiple locations’ injuries reported).
ED, emergency department presentations; HA, hospital admissions; NR, not reported.
Broad mechanism of injury as a percentage of all medical-attention injuries in community cricket
| First author, year (reference) | No of injuries | Struck by ball | Struck by bat or equipment | Non-specific overexertion | Non-specific falls | Player collision | Other/NR |
| Perera, 2019 | |||||||
| HA | 121 | 44.6* | 12.4 | 27.3 | – | 15.7 | |
| ED | 547 | 63.8* | – | 19.0 | – | 17.2 | |
| Walker, 2010 | 498 | 28.9 | 6.6 | 20.5 | 21.7 | 6.8 | 15.5 |
| Upadhyay, 2000 | 60 | 51.7 | 23.3 | – | 20.0 | 5.0 | – |
| Forward, 1988 | 65 | 98.4 | 1.6 | – | – | – | – |
*Struck by ball or bat combined.
ED, emergency department presentations; HA, hospital admissions; NR, not reported.