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Characteristics of Adolescent Athletes Seeking Early Versus Late Care for Sport-Related Concussion

Germann D1 , Cancelliere C2,3 , Kazemi M1, Marshall C4, Hogg-Johnson S1,2,3,6 1CanadianMemorialChiropracticCollege, 2OntarioTechUniversity, 3InstituteforDisabilityandRehabilitationResearch,OntarioTech UniversityandCanadianMemorialChiropracticCollege, 4CompleteConcussionManagementInc.,5UniversityofToronto

Abstract

Objectives

To determine which characteristics of adolescent athletes with SRC are associated with ‘early’ versus ‘late’ presentation for multimodal treatment; 2) to build a propensity score to investigate the effects of treatment timing during the management of SRCs.

Methods

Associations between early (0–7 days) versus late (8–28 days) presentation for treatment and pre-specified sociodemographic, pre-injury and injury characteristics were investigated in a historical cohort study of 2949 multisport athletes across Canada aged 12–18 years diagnosed with a SRC in community-based healthcare clinics.

Results

Early presentation was associated with being male, completing a pre-injury baseline assessment, and responding ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to having a diagnosed learning disability. Older athletes who reported previous SRCs were less likely to present early. The propensity score demonstrated an area under the curve of 0.71 (95% CI, 0.69 to 0.73).

Conclusions

Male athletes with a completed baseline assessment were more likely to seek early treatment following a SRC, and older athletes who reported a greater number of previous SRCs were less likely to present early. External validation of the propensity score is needed before examining the impact of treatment timing on adolescent athlete recovery outcomes.

OriginallypublishedinTheJournalofCanadianthe CanadianChiropracticAssociation,2021Dec;65(3):260-274

ReproducedwithpermissionfromTheJournalofthe CanadianChiropracticAssociation

Access online:ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/ PMC8791547/

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