The design, development, implementation and evaluation of IRISweb; A rugby-specific web-based injury surveillance system
Objectives: To describe the development, implementation and evaluation of a comprehensive injury surveillance system.
Design: The four phases;
i) A survey of 58 medical professionals working in amateur rugby.
ii) The design of a web-based injury surveillance system (IRISweb).
iii) Recruitment of 21 of the top 58 amateur clubs to use IRISweb.
iv) An evaluation survey of the 21 participating clubs.
Setting: Irish amateur rugby clubs.
Participants: Medical professionals working in amateur rugby.
Main outcome measures: Phase one investigated the injury monitoring practices in operation prior to the IRIS project. Phase four investigated the effectiveness and usefulness of IRISweb.
Results: Twenty-one clubs were recruited, however 2 clubs failed to provide a full season of data (10% dropout rate). Eighty-two percent of the remaining 19 clubs rated IRISweb as `good` or `very good`. Facilitators of injury surveillance were; increased player adherence (65%) and notifications to update the system (59%), however, poor player adherence (71%) and medical staff availability (24%) were the main barriers.
Conclusions: The IRIS project is the first prospective long-term injury surveillance system in Irish amateur rugby, effectively tracking injuries to guide future evidence-based injury prevention strategies. This study highlights facilitators and barriers to injury surveillance within amateur sport.
© Copyright 2019 Physical Therapy in Sport. Elsevier. All rights reserved.
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| Notations: | biological and medical sciences sport games technical and natural sciences |
| Published in: | Physical Therapy in Sport |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
2019
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ptsp.2018.11.007 |
| Volume: | 35 |
| Issue: | January |
| Pages: | 79-88 |
| Document types: | article |
| Level: | advanced |