
@article{ref1,
title="Sports injuries in an accident and emergency department",
journal="Archives of emergency medicine",
year="1984",
author="Watters, D. A. and Brooks, Stephanie and Elton, R. A. and Little, K.",
volume="1",
number="2",
pages="105-111",
abstract="Over a one year period, 2270 sports injuries were seen in the Accident and Emergency Department at the Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh. This represented 3.9% of the total new patients seen in that year. Football and rugby were the most frequent sports responsible for injury. Seventy-eight per cent of injured persons were 26 or under and 88.7% of injuries occurred in men. The two months with the most sports injuries were September and February; 74% (1683) patients stated they trained at least once a week and 85% (1895) played the sport in which they were injured at least once a week. Players who did not train were less likely to incur a severe injury than those who did. Fourteen per cent of the injuries were the result of foul play, but again foul play was less likely to cause a serious injury; 41% of injuries were to the lower limb; 45% of injuries were fractures, dislocations, lacerations and head injuries; 7% of patients required admission to hospital and 22% were referred to a clinic. Seventy-seven per cent of the referrals were to the orthopaedic department. The relevance of these figures to the accident and emergency workload is discussed.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0264-4924",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}