| Literature DB >> 34345440 |
Huw Rees1,2, James Matthews1,2, Ulrik McCarthy Persson1,2, Eamonn Delahunt1,2, Colin Boreham1,2, Catherine Blake1,2.
Abstract
Translating injury prevention research into practice has been challenging, which may be due to a poor understanding of the contextual factors influencing the occurrence of injury. Coaches are key figure in sporting environments and hold pivotal roles in preventing injury. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the attitudes of field hockey coaches to injury and injury prevention. Thirteen field hockey coaches from the amateur Irish Hockey League were interviewed. Reflexive thematic analysis led to three general dimensions comprised five higher-order themes, categorised from 16 lower-order themes. Coaches had positive beliefs regarding the benefits of injury prevention over injury management. However, they lacked the necessary knowledge and skills to successfully implement injury prevention strategies with players. Coaches recognised the importance of empowering players to self-manage training loads to promote injury prevention but acknowledged the need to protect younger players from increased loads. Many barriers to injury prevention were not controllable by coaches including fixture congestion and poor structuring of the sport's domestic calendar. While coaches can play a key role in the implementation of injury prevention strategies, there is also a requirement to examine how system level barriers to injury prevention can be reduced. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: field hockey; knowledge translation; qualitative; sporting injuries
Year: 2021 PMID: 34345440 PMCID: PMC8320248 DOI: 10.1136/bmjsem-2021-001074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med ISSN: 2055-7647
Figure 1The development of the general dimensions, higher-order themes and lower-order themes through reflexive thematic analysis.21
Main codes and related quotes on the dimension ‘the attitudes of coaches to injury prevention’
| Higher-order theme | Lower-order theme | |
| Coaches value prevention and identification of risk factors | Knowledge of injury prevention | ‘Even these [different software applications] where players write in and give details about their muscle soreness and their fatigue. That’s all fine, it’s good information, but how do I adjust the programme that they’re on to make it beneficial for the player? It would all be guess work. It wouldn’t be based on anything scientific. My knowledge wouldn’t be sufficient. It would be purely based on what I think might be a solution. But, in reality, it might not be a solution’. |
| Identification of risk factors | ‘From an injury causing [point of view], obviously matches are a higher intensity. With the [amount of] travel, there’s obviously more tendency not to recover properly from matches. [Both] from match to match and from training to training’. | |
| Injury prevention methods | ‘To try to prevent injuries, we would incorporate a number of different things into our sessions. Appropriate activation techniques and appropriate conditioning would be the main ways. Also, effective warm up, effective cool down. Then there’s your recovery strategies, whether it’s pool recovery or a massage. We often try different things’. | |
| Player safety and welfare are the priority | Management of fatigue | ‘I would probably tell the player that if he’s constantly feeling this tiredness, he certainly wouldn’t be under any pressure to play. I would probably advise him to get some sort of expert advice to get it sorted out as soon as possible. Ultimately, the player welfare and the injury have to be of most importance’. |
| Reaction to serious injury | ‘You would have to take the medical advice. Because you’re leaving yourself wide open to a court case if you don’t. If that player collapsed or had some sort of brain injury because you put them on the pitch when you were told they shouldn’t be, it’s on you. If a player is concussed, you also have to believe that they’re not in a fit state to make a good decision’. | |
| Management of chronic injury | ‘[I would] talk to the player and see. If it’s not going to do anymore damage, we would taper his workload. If he pulls up, he doesn’t play. If he can get through it, then I’m in a position that we can taper his pitch time to make sure that we can get him on the pitch. And if it’s beneficial that way, then it’s fine, keep playing’. |
Main codes and related quotes on the dimension ‘coaches’ impact on injury prevention’
| Higher-order theme | Lower-order theme | |
| Style of coaching and communication attempt to ensure player safety | Development of culture | ‘This year, we’ve tried to make it more open. “Right, this is what we think, what do the players think?” We’re trying to make it more open, a bit more transparent. It’s not such a closed shop anymore. It’s not just what the coach says, goes. It’s trying to get everybody better at making decisions, particular when managing load’. |
| Effects of coaching style | ‘It’s important to listen to the player. Even if somebody is struggling, there’s things you can do. You don’t have to not train. You can still do things at 60%, you can work on skills, you can do some shooting. You don’t have to be sprinting and fatiguing and so, I think listening to the player among other [things] can minimise injuries’. | |
| Organisation of internal power | ‘As I say to them all the time, [some of the players] have more experience than we do. One of them has played in one of the biggest clubs in the world and had been to an Olympics and a World Cup. So, why not try and take some of his knowledge out’. | |
| Injury prevention needs to be age-specific | Communication difference between social groups | ‘With some of the younger guys, there’s certain things you don’t want to be doing with them. It’s probably more of an arm around them and here’s what we should do. We’re trying to just explain more to the younger guys as much as to why we’re doing things. Obviously still valuing their opinion, but they tend not to say much’. |
| Experience and social hierarchy | ‘The elite athletes and [senior players] will demand more information. “Ok, I’m injured, what am I supposed to do about it?” They drive the standards. The coach or the manager can put out an aspirational standard, but it’s actually the players that drive it’. | |
| Excessive demands placed on youth | ‘If you’re working with younger players, a lot of them aren’t going to have the necessary experience and knowledge to know when enough is enough or how far can push themselves and would tend to over push themselves. At this stage, it’s the responsibility of the coach and [senior players] to give them the information and to recognise when players have pushed themselves too far or potentially could’. |
Main codes and related quotes on the dimension ‘contextual barriers to injury prevention’
| Higher-order theme | Lower-order theme | |
| Environmental and system-level barriers to injury prevention | Match workload affects injury risk | ‘[Modifying training intensity is] definitely something you learn over time. We would speak to some of the guys playing abroad [in professional leagues] where they could have two or three sessions a day between strength and conditioning, outfield sessions and video sessions. It wouldn’t be unheard of, especially around [times when we have a lot of matches], just to be running sessions for 1.5 hours’. |
| Amateur nature of field hockey | ‘It’s purely voluntary from [a professionalism] point of view. But everyone is expected to play, to train on either the Wednesday or Thursday. But sometimes if a player has got an exam the next day or is away on business or can’t make training for whatever reason, then we just have to accept that that’s reality and get on with it really’. | |
| Lack of medical and support staff | ‘[Having access to medical resources] would be great if you had the time and the finances. I think both of them are a big factor. Finance obviously an issue, but it’s the time factor as well. You’re so limited. You have two hours with somebody. You’ve got to warm-up for half an hour. I don’t know when we’d fit in being able to see a [club] physio’. | |
| Athlete factors limit prevention | ‘[Our players] aren’t focused on their cool down, they don’t understand the importance of the cool down and other recovery [techniques]. Their warm-up, their rehab on a Monday or Wednesday night or whatever they’re doing. I just think we lack a bit of understanding’.-In relation to coaches general understanding of how it may be possible to prevent injuries. |