通过蓝卡检查社会关系和脑震荡管理

Michael P. Jorgensen, P. Safai, Lynda Mainwaring
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摘要

橄榄球比赛中的 "蓝卡 "倡议最初是由新西兰橄榄球队于 2014 年制定的,该倡议使比赛官员能够在运动员被怀疑受到脑震荡的情况下让其退出比赛。体育和健康倡导者相当关注这一举措在保障运动员健康方面的可能性和局限性。然而,对于那些负责管理蓝卡的人(即比赛官员)的健康问题却很少关注。本文旨在研究比赛官员在加拿大安大略省实施蓝卡计划的经验和观点,重点关注他们在管理比赛和参与者(如运动员、教练员等)的能力方面存在的紧张关系、我们使用关系协调理论(RCT)作为指导框架和定性研究方法,重点介绍了 19 名比赛官员在运动相关脑震荡(SRC)管理和蓝卡协议方面的丰富观点和经验。我们的研究结果强调了在脑震荡管理中关注社会关系的必要性,并深入分析了比赛官员在脑震荡管理前线的艰难经历。我们确定了影响比赛官员福祉的因素,并为旨在改善运动员安全的脑震荡管理举措(如蓝卡)提供了考虑因素。
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An examination of social relations and concussion management via the blue card
Initially developed by New Zealand Rugby in 2014, the Blue Card initiative in rugby enables match officials to remove athletes from play if they are suspected to have sustained a concussion. Considerable attention has been paid by sport and health advocates to the possibilities and limitations of this initiative in safeguarding athlete health. However, little if any attention has been paid to the well-being of those responsible for administering the Blue Card (i.e., match officials). The aim of this paper was to examine match officials' experiences with and perspectives on implementing the Blue Card initiative in Ontario, Canada, with focused attention on the tensions around their ability to manage games and participants (e.g., athletes, coaches) while attempting to safeguard athlete well-being.Using Relational Coordination Theory (RCT) as a guiding framework and qualitative research method, we highlight the rich accounts of 19 match officials' perspectives and experiences regarding sport-related concussion (SRC) management and the Blue Card protocol.Four themes were derived from the data, reflecting latent assumptions embedded within the concussion management process, which include: assumptions of trust, respect, and cooperation; assumptions of shared responsibility; assumptions of shared understanding; and assumptions of harassment-free sport.Our findings emphasize the need to attend to social relations in concussion management and provide insight into match officials' fraught experiences on the frontlines of concussion management. We identify factors affecting match official well-being and provide considerations for concussion management initiatives designed to improve athlete safety, such as the Blue Card.
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