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Journal Article

Citation

Raschka C, Raschka S, Peikert T. Versicherungsmedizin 2009; 61(4): 173-176.

Vernacular Title

Sportunfallerhebung der Nicht-BG-Falle einer chirurgischen Abteilung eines

Affiliation

Chirurgischen Abteilung der Helios St.Elisabeth-Klinik, Hünfeld.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Verlag Versucherungswirtschaft)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

20052829

Abstract

This epidemiological study analyses all n = 1,659 outpatient and inpatient non-confraternity sports accidents treated during a 2-year period in a former district hospital. The largest share with 40.6% is soccer, followed by cycling (15%), general fitness sports (7.6%), outdoor sports (6.5%), winter sports (5.5%), and riding (5.2%). Soccer injuries rise steadily until the age of 30. Of 86 horse riding accidents a total of 68 involved women, but only 18 men (ratio 8 : 2). 53% of the horse riding accidents among women concern the age group between 10 and 20 years. 70.6% (79%) of the athletes under (over) 20 years were male, 29.4% (21%) female (p < 0.05). Topographically the lower extremities represent the most affected body region in all sports (runners 84.4%, soccer players 60.2%). Most accidents occur on a Sunday. The most common diagnosis is contusion, most commonly in martial arts (60.8%), followed by horse riding (51%). There is an astonishing dominance of soccer accidents given the fact that this study records all athletes, not just club athletes, unlike insurance studies. Important preventive measures would be a comprehensive biological training prophylaxis and the provision of communication of age-specific accident prevention proposals for the mainly affected sports.


Language: de

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