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Journal Article

Citation

Sarmiento K, Donnell Z, Bell E, Tennant B, Hoffman R. J. Concussion 2019; 3: e2059700219861863.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/2059700219861863

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Background

Concussion, a commonly reported injury among young athletes, can lead to short- and long-term physical, cognitive, emotional, and sleep-related symptoms. Parents are in a unique position to help identify a possible concussion and to support an athlete's recovery.

Methods

This qualitative study used a focus group methodology to explore five research questions focused on two main topics: (1) parents' perception of concussion and (2) parent-athlete communication. Two authors independently reviewed notes from each of the focus groups and then generated a list of emerging themes related to five research questions.

Results

Parents in this study valued and were interested in discussing concussion with their athletes. However, parents were uncertain about their role in promoting concussion safety and often rely on coaches to communicate with athletes about concussion reporting and recovery. Participants described barriers their athletes may face in concussion reporting and suggested strategies to improve communication about both reporting and recovery.

Conclusion

Concussion education efforts may benefit from promoting specific actions parents can take to prevent concussion and how to communicate effectively with their child about reporting a possible concussion.

Keywords Parent, sport, education


Language: en

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