TY - JOUR PY - 2022// TI - Scoping review of injuries in amateur and professional men's ice hockey: response JO - Orthopaedic journal of sports medicine A1 - Szukics, Patrick A1 - Otlans, Peters T. A1 - Arevalo, Alfonso A1 - Meade, Matthew A1 - DeLuca, Peter A1 - Salvo, John P. SP - e23259671221124960 EP - e23259671221124960 VL - 10 IS - 9 N2 -
We appreciate the interest in our study and the opportunity to respond to the issues raised. The insight from these authors is highly valued, as their previous work has also provided data in the field of orthopaedic injuries in men’s ice hockey players. We agree that this scoping review should capture and report on all possible published orthopaedic studies regarding this patient population, and precision in the methodology of how these reviews are performed is of the utmost importance in interpreting and applying these findings for future studies, as well as future clinical decision making. We do apologize for the omission of the articles by Brunner et al1 and Nordstrøm et al,5 both of whom were authors of the letter to the editor. We can confidently assure the authors, as well as the readers of the Orthopaedic Journal of Sports Medicine, that we were diligently rigorous and transparent in the methods of our study to ensure that our results were trustworthy, as mentioned in the letter to the editor. After identifying our research question, we made every attempt to identify all relevant studies at that time and developed a decision plan for where to search, which search terms to use, which sources to search, how long to search, and what language to use, as detailed in our article.7 We made every attempt to ensure our search strategy was explicit, transparent, and as comprehensive as possible.2,4 We believe that the issue causing frustration as described in the letter to the editor—the omission of the authors’ articles1,5 from our scoping review—is a result that can occur during any scoping review. Unfortunately, the two studies1,5 were inadvertently and inexplicably not captured by our initial literature search, for which we apologize. Any scoping review We appreciate the interest in our study and the opportunity to respond to the issues raised. The insight from these authors is highly valued, as their previous work has also provided data in the field of orthopaedic injuries in men’s ice hockey players. We agree that this scoping review should capture and report on all possible published orthopaedic studies regarding this patient population, and precision in the methodology of how these reviews are performed is of the utmost importance in interpreting and applying these findings for future studies, as well as future clinical decision making. We do apologize for the omission of the articles by Brunner et al1 and Nordstrøm et al,5 both of whom were authors of the letter to the editor. We can confidently assure the authors, as well as the readers of the Orthopaedic Journal of Sports Medicine, that we were diligently rigorous and transparent in the methods of our study to ensure that our results were trustworthy, as mentioned in the letter to the editor. After identifying our research question, we made every attempt to identify all relevant studies at that time and developed a decision plan for where to search, which search terms to use, which sources to search, how long to search, and what language to use, as detailed in our article.7 We made every attempt to ensure our search strategy was explicit, transparent, and as comprehensive as possible.2,4 We believe that the issue causing frustration as described in the letter to the editor—the omission of the authors’ articles1,5 from our scoping review—is a result that can occur during any scoping review. Unfortunately, the two studies1,5 were inadvertently and inexplicably not captured by our initial literature search, for which we apologize. Any scoping review performed has the potential to succumb to random error, even when appropriate previously published precautions are followed.3,6 This is especially true when conducting such a large scoping review, in which the initial study screening included over 4,000 articles, as seen in Figure 1 of our article.7 We did follow a previously published and accepted methodology for conducting scoping reviews, which involved initially screening titles and abstracts by two separate authors, followed by conducting a second-stage full-text article review, and finally ending with a discussion with the senior author to resolve any conflicts when a consensus could not be achieved.3,6 We agree that the two articles1,5 mentioned in the letter to the editor are relevant to our scoping review and should have been included in our publication, and we encourage readers to read their referenced studies as well to function as a supplement to our article to fully understand the most up-to-date information regarding the epidemiology of men’s ice hockey injuries from the junior level up through the professional level.7 Despite this issue, we are confident that the information we presented and the conclusions we drew from it do represent the most up-to-date results regarding the epidemiology of men’s ice hockey injuriesperformed has the potential to succumb to random error, even when appropriate previously published precautions are followed.3,6 This is especially true when conducting such a large scoping review, in which the initial study screening included over 4,000 articles, as seen in Figure 1 of our article.7 We did follow a previously published and accepted methodology for conducting scoping reviews, which involved initially screening titles and abstracts by two separate authors, followed by conducting a second-stage full-text article review, and finally ending with a discussion with the senior author to resolve any conflicts when a consensus could not be achieved.3,6 We agree that the two articles1,5 mentioned in the letter to the editor are relevant to our scoping review and should have been included in our publication, and we encourage readers to read their referenced studies as well to function as a supplement to our article to fully understand the most up-to-date information regarding the epidemiology of men’s ice hockey injuries from the junior level up through the professional level. Despite this issue, we are confident that the information we presented and the conclusions we drew from it do represent the most up-to-date results regarding the epidemiology of men’s ice hockey injuries ...
Language: en
LA - en SN - 2325-9671 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23259671221124960 ID - ref1 ER -