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Sports Specialization and Sports-Related Injuries in Japanese School-Aged Children and Adolescents: A Retrospective Descriptive Study

Ryosuke Shigematsu, Shuta Katoh, Koya Suzuki, Yoshio Nakata, Hiroyuki Sasai

2021International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Although early sports specialization is associated with sports-related injuries, relevant quantitative studies on young non-elite athletes, the majority of sports participants, are scarce. We described sports specialization time points and the characteristics of sports-related injuries. Undergraduate students at a university in Japan (n = 830) recalled their history of sports participation from elementary to high school and sports-related injuries in a self-administered questionnaire. Of 570 valid respondents, 486 (85%) engaged in sports at least once. Significantly more respondents played multiple sports in upper elementary school (30%) than in other school categories (1–23%). In junior high and high schools, 90% and 99% played only one sport, respectively. Of the 486 respondents who played sports, 263 (54%) had experienced acute or overuse injuries. The proportion of injured participants significantly differed by school category: lower elementary school (4%), upper elementary school (21%), junior high (35%), and high school (41%). The proportions of acute or overuse injuries in males were higher than those in females. In conclusion, this study clarified a slight variation in sports items, particularly in junior high and high schools, which demonstrates 13 years as the age of beginning specialization in a single sport. More than half of the non-elite athletes experienced sports-related injuries. Injuries were frequently observed in males and those in junior high and high schools.

Topics & Concepts

AthletesInjury preventionMedicineSuicide preventionHuman factors and ergonomicsElitePoison controlSports injuryYouth sportsOccupational safety and healthPhysical therapyPsychologyMedical emergencyLawPoliticsPolitical sciencePathologySports injuries and preventionInjury Epidemiology and PreventionTraumatic Brain Injury Research