TY - JOUR PY - 2022// TI - The incidence and burden of injuries in elite English youth female soccer players JO - Science and medicine in football A1 - Beech, Jake A1 - Jones, Ben A1 - King, Ryan A1 - Bennett, Pippa A1 - Young, Stephanie A1 - Williams, Sean A1 - Stokes, Keith A1 - Emmonds, Stacey SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 - This study aimed to investigate the incidence, severity, and burden of injury in English elite youth female soccer players. Qualified therapists at six English girls' academies prospectively recorded all injuries that required medical attention or caused time loss for matches and training in 375 elite youth female soccer players (under-10 , U12, U14 and U16) during the 2019/2020 season. One hundred- and eleven time-loss injuries (52 from training, 59 from matches) were sustained, resulting in 1,946 days absent (779 days from training injuries, 1,167 days from match injuries) from soccer activities. The injury incidence for matches (9.3/1000 hours, 95% CIs: 7.2-11.9) was significantly greater than training (1.1/1000 hours, 95% CIs: 0.9-1.5, p<0.001). Additionally, the injury burden for matches (183 days lost/1000 hours, 95% CIs: 142-237) was significantly greater than training (17 days lost/1000 hours, 95% CIs: 13-22, p<0.001). Injury incidence and burden were greatest in the U16 age group, and were found to increase with age. Whilst injury incidence and burden are greater in matches than training, a large proportion of preventable injuries, soft-tissue and non-contact in nature, were sustained in training.

FINDINGS provide comparative data for elite youth female soccer players.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 2473-3938 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/24733938.2022.2051730 ID - ref1 ER -