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Journal Article

Citation

Leddy MH, Lambert MJ, Ogles BM. Res. Q. Exerc. Sport 1994; 65(4): 347-354.

Affiliation

Psychological Services, Northeast Mental Health Center, Mental Health and Mental Retardation Authority of Harris County, Houston, Texas.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1994, American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

7886284

Abstract

Injury prohibiting continued athletic participation has been hypothesized to have a predictable emotional impact on athletes (Rotella & Heyman, 1986). However, the psychological impact of injury has not been well documented. This study examined the psychological reactions to injury among 343 male collegiate athletes participating in 10 sports. All athletes were assessed using measures of depression, anxiety, and self-esteem during preseason physical examinations. Injured athletes along with matched controls were later assessed within one week of experiencing an athletic injury and 2 months later. A 4 x 3 (Injury Status x Time of Testing) repeated measures multivariate analysis of variance (DM MANOVA) revealed that injured athletes exhibited greater depression and anxiety and lower self-esteem than controls immediately following physical injury and at follow-up 2 months later. These findings supported the general observation that physically injured athletes experience a period of emotional distress that in some cases may be severe enough to warrant clinical intervention.


Language: en

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