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A comparison of recreational skiing- and snowboarding-related injuries at a Colorado ski resort, 2012/13-2016/17

Lauren A. Pierpoint, Zachary Y. Kerr, Tessa Crume, Gary K. Grunwald, R. Dawn Comstock, Darcy K. Selenke, Morteza Khodaee

2020Research in Sports Medicine21 citationsDOI

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to compare injury patterns between recreational skiers and snowboarders. Injured skiers (n = 3,961) and snowboarders (n = 2,428) presented to a mountainside medical clinic, 2012/13-2016/17. Variables investigated for analysis included demographics/characteristics, injury event information, and injury information. Skiers were older than snowboarders (34.3 ± 19.3 vs. 23.2 ± 10.5 years, p < 0.001); a greater proportion of skiers were female (46.3% vs. 27.8%, p < 0.001). Most skiers (84.4%) and snowboarders (84.5%) were helmeted at the time of injury (p = 0.93). Snowboarders were most frequently beginners (38.9%), skiers were intermediates (37.8%). Falls to snow (skiers = 72.3%, snowboarders = 84.8%) and collisions with natural objects (skiers = 9.7%, snowboarders = 7.4%) were common injury mechanisms. Common skiing injuries were knee sprains (20.5%) and head trauma (8.9%); common snowboarding injuries were wrist fractures (25.7%), shoulder separations (9.1%), and head trauma (9.0%). Given that injury patterns significantly differ between sports, it is important for clinicians, ski patrollers, and resorts to develop and deliver sport-specific injury prevention interventions to most effectively decrease injury burden.

Topics & Concepts

Injury surveillanceMedicineDemographicsPhysical therapyInjury preventionPoison controlRecreationHead injuryPhysical medicine and rehabilitationMedical emergencySurgeryDemographyLawPolitical scienceSociologyWinter Sports Injuries and PerformanceSports injuries and preventionCryospheric studies and observations