Injury risk increases minimally over a large range of changes in activity level in children
Chinchin Wang, Tyrel Stokes, jorge Trejo Vargas, Russell Steele, Niels, Wedderkopp, Ian Shrier

TL;DR
This study found that in children, injury risk slightly increases with large changes in activity levels, but overall, injury risk remains low across a wide range of activity variations, especially compared to adults.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of how different ACWR variations predict injury risk in children over a long-term cohort study.
Findings
Injury risk is minimal between ACWR 0.8 and 1.5.
Injury risk increases significantly with activity increases over 50%.
Girls have higher injury risk than boys.
Abstract
Background: Limited research exists on the association between changes in physical activity levels and injury in children. Objective: To assess how well different variations of the acute:chronic workload ratio (ACWR), a measure of change in activity, predict injury in children. Methods: We conducted a prospective cohort study using data from 1670 Danish schoolchildren measured over 5.5 years (2008 to 2014). Coupled 4-week, uncoupled 4-week, and uncoupled 5-week ACWRs were calculated using activity frequency in the past week as the acute load (numerator), and average weekly activity frequency in the past 4 or 5 weeks as the chronic load (denominator). We modelled the relationship between different ACWR variations and injury using generalized linear and generalized additive models, with and without accounting for repeated measures. Results: The prognostic relationship between the ACWR and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInjury Epidemiology and Prevention · Occupational Health and Performance · Traffic and Road Safety
