Results of a tri-national online survey on the current status of sports injury prevention among members of the German-Speaking Orthopaedic Sports Medicine Society (GOTS)
24/10/2022
C. Lutter 1; R. Seil 2, 3; R. Best 4; A. Gokeler 5;
T. Patt 6; W. Krutsch 7; C. Grim 8; T. Tischer 1
1 - Department of Orthopedics, University Medical Center, Rostock, Germany
2 - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Centre Hospitalier de Luxembourg-Clinique d'Eich, Luxembourg, Luxembourg
3 - Luxembourg Institute of Health, Luxembourg.
4 - Sportklinik Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany
5 - Department Exercise & Health, Exercise Science and Neuroscience, University of Paderborn, Paderborn, Germany
6 - Bergman Clinics, Delft, Netherlands W Krutsch
7 - SportDocsFranken, Nürnberg; Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Centre Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany
8 - Department of Orthopedic, Trauma and Hand Surgery, Klinikum Osnabrück, Germany
Abstract
Objectives
To assess the current opinions and state of knowledge in primary sports injury prevention among members of the German-Speaking Society for Orthopaedic and Traumatologic Sports Medicine (GOTS).
Methods
On 21 August 2019, a web-based questionnaire was sent to the members of the tri-national society GOTS (Austria, Germany and Switzerland). The survey was online until 21 November 2019 and included twenty-two questions, which were divided into five sections: 1) general importance of prevention (n = 4), 2) specifications of the study population (n = 3), 3) implementation of prevention (n = 8), 4) improvement opportunities in prevention (n = 4) and 5) future research areas (n = 3).
Results
A total of 272 participants completed the survey, representing a total survey participation of 17.7 % of all members. The study population consisted of orthopaedic surgeons (55 % with surgical and 21 % with non-operative orientation), medical students (10 %), physical therapists (8 %) and sports scientists (4 %). Ninety-four percent of all participants stated that they considered the importance of sports injury prevention to be “very high” (68 %) or “high” (26 %). However, almost 70 % of all participants stated that they spend less than one hour per week on injury prevention work. The term “prevention” was clearly defined and practicable for only 40 %, understandable but difficult to implement for 51 %, and unclear and difficult to implement for 9 % of the participants. Seventy-two percent of respondents were aware of existing prevention programs such as “Stop-X” or “FIFA 11 +”, whereas 28 % of participants were uninformed regarding these programs.
Conclusions
A strong divergence was identified between participants’ perception of the importance of sports injury prevention and the existing implementation of preventive measures. Future funding of prevention programs, expansion of research strategies for injury prevention and better financial reimbursement are of utmost importance.