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Injury rates decreased in men’s professional football: an 18-year prospective cohort study of almost 12 000 injuries sustained during 1.8 million hours of play

Jan Ekstrand, Armin Sprečo, Håkan Bengtsson, Roald Bahr

2021British Journal of Sports Medicine196 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The UEFA Elite Club Injury Study is the largest and longest running injury surveillance programme in football. OBJECTIVE: To analyse the 18-season time trends in injury rates among male professional football players. METHODS: 3302 players comprising 49 teams (19 countries) were followed from 2000-2001 through 2018-2019. Team medical staff recorded individual player exposure and time-loss injuries. RESULTS: A total of 11 820 time-loss injuries were recorded during 1 784 281 hours of exposure. Injury incidence fell gradually during the 18-year study period, 3% per season for both training injuries (95% CI 1% to 4% decrease, p=0.002) and match injuries (95% CI 2% to 3% decrease, p<0.001). Ligament injury incidence decreased 5% per season during training (95% CI 3% to 7% decrease, p<0.001) and 4% per season during match play (95% CI 3% to 6% decrease, p<0.001), while the rate of muscle injuries remained constant. The incidence of reinjuries decreased by 5% per season during both training (95% CI 2% to 8% decrease, p=0.001) and matches (95% CI 3% to 7% decrease, p<0.001). Squad availability increased by 0.7% per season for training sessions (95% CI 0.5% to 0.8% increase, p<0.001) and 0.2% per season for matches (95% CI 0.1% to 0.3% increase, p=0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Over 18 years: (1) injury incidence decreased in training and matches, (2) reinjury rates decreased, and (3) player availability for training and match play increased.

Topics & Concepts

FootballInjury preventionProspective cohort studyMedicineOccupational safety and healthPoison controlSuicide preventionHuman factors and ergonomicsCohortPhysical therapyCohort studyMedical emergencyGerontologyEmergency medicineSurgeryInternal medicineHistoryPathologyArchaeologySports injuries and preventionSport Psychology and PerformanceTraumatic Brain Injury Research