An Epidemiologic Comparison of Injuries to Skiers and Snowboarders Treated at United States Emergency Departments, 2000-2019.

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2024-05-01 Epub Date: 2024-01-08 DOI:10.1055/a-2240-7747
Naomi Kelley, Lauren Pierpoint, Anahita Saeedi, Justin E Hellwinkel, Morteza Khodaee
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Abstract

Skiing and snowboarding are popular competitive and recreational sports that can be associated with significant injury. Previous studies of skiing and snowboarding injuries have been conducted, but studies evaluating injury types and patterns over long periods of time are needed to drive effective injury prevention efforts. We hypothesized that injury patterns would differ among snowboarders and skiers and that the number of injuries remained constant over time. This is a retrospective study of patients presenting with skiing or snowboarding injuries to the United States emergency departments from 2000 to 2019. A total of 34,720 injured skiers (48.0%) and snowboarders (52.0%) presented to US emergency departments over a 20-year period, representing an estimated 1,620,576 injuries nationwide. There is a decreasing trend of the number of injuries over the study period (p=0.012). Males represented the majority (65.7%) of injuries. Skiers were older than snowboarders (mean 30.1 vs. 20.0 years; p<0.001) and patients aged<18 represented more snowboarding (57.0%) than skiing (43.0%) injuries (p<0.001). Common diagnoses included fractures (33.0%) and sprains/strains (26.9%). Snowboarders primarily presented with upper extremity injuries, meanwhile, skiers primarily presented with lower extremity injuries. Most patients (93.2%), were treated and discharged from the emergency departments. Understanding the epidemiology of injuries presenting to emergency departments can help guide prehospital care and medical coverage allocation for resorts and event organizers, as well as identifying areas for targeted injury prevention efforts.

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2000-2019 年美国急诊科治疗的滑雪和单板滑雪伤害。
以前曾对滑雪/滑雪板运动伤害进行过研究,但需要对伤害类型和模式进行长期评估,以推动有效的伤害预防工作。我们假设,不同冬季运动的受伤模式会有所不同,而受伤人数则会随着时间的推移而保持不变。这是一项回顾性研究,研究对象是 2000-2019 年期间在美国急诊科就诊的滑雪/单板滑雪受伤患者。20 年间,共有 34,720 名滑雪者(48.0%)和单板滑雪者(52.0%)在美国急诊科就诊,全国受伤人数约为 1,620,576 人。在研究期间,受伤人数呈下降趋势(P=0.012)。受伤者以男性居多(65.7%)。滑雪者的年龄比单板滑雪者大(平均 30.1 岁对 20.0 岁;P=0.012)。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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