4032685

Injury to swimmers: bad luck, bad athletes or bad management

Due to the high repetitious workload of swimming training, overuse injuries especially of the shoulder are a costly problem for swimming. Due to different logistical reasons long term injury surveillance in swimming has not been achieved and research is often around perceived risk factors examined retrospectively and/or cross-sectionally. The identified risk factors often place 'the blame' for injury on some sort of athlete inadequacy {genetic, flexibility, strength, technique). However the most consistent findings that occur in the literature related to injury are to do with training volume and structure. Training ramped up too quickly, taken too high or maintained at monotonous levels are all related to injury. This of course places considerable responsibility on the coach. The basic recording of injury history and injury costs associated with measurement of the load athletes are placed under is fundamental information required for swimming to advance in the area of injury prevention.
© Copyright 2014 XIIth International Symposium for Biomechanics and Medicine in Swimming. Published by Australian Institute of Sport. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notationen:endurance sports biological and medical sciences
Published in:XIIth International Symposium for Biomechanics and Medicine in Swimming
Format: Compilation Article
Language:English
Published: Canberra Australian Institute of Sport 2014
Online Access:https://open-archive.sport-iat.de/bms/12_11-13_Blanch.pdf
Seiten:11-13
Level:advanced