Athlete Concussion History Recall Is Underestimated: A Validation Study Of Self-Reported Concussion History Among Current Professional Rugby Union Players

BRAIN INJURY(2021)

引用 5|浏览18
暂无评分
摘要
Objective: To assess the concurrent validity and test re-test reliability of the Michigan Traumatic Brain Injury Identication Method (MTBIIM). The psychometric properties of this concussion index were investigated by comparing the agreement between player self-reported diagnosed concussions and medical record diagnosed concussions among professional rugby union players.Study Design: Cross-sectional study i) validation and ii) test re-test reliability.Methods: The MTBIIM was administered via a structured interview to obtain the number and nature of player self-reported concussion histories from players, while contracted to the host club. Self-reported concussion history information was compared to medically recorded data captured between 2008 and 2017. A mixed-ects logistic regression model explored predictors of player self-report accuracy.Results: Data from 62 players (25.39[4.36] years) included 99 unique rugby related concussions. Medically documented concussions (n = 92) per player (1.48 [1.96]) were 30% more than the mean number of self-reported diagnosed (n = 63) concussions per player (1.02 [1.21] events). Overall, self-reported diagnosed concussions and medical record diagnosed concussion histories had a 'fair' level of agreement (k=0.274; SE [0.076]), p=.001). Self-reported lifetime concussion history was signicantly negatively correlated with recall of concussions.Conclusions: Initial concurrent validity of the MTBIIM was found to be fair with the average athlete under-reporting the number of clinically diagnosed concussions.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Concussion, mild traumatic brain injury, rugby, agreement, reliability, validity
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要