Prevalence of and Factors Associated with Sports Injuries in 11,000 Japanese Collegiate Athletes
Takeshi Kimura, Aleksandra Katarzyna Mącznik, Akira Kinoda, Yuichi Yamada, Yuki Muramoto, Yoshinori Katsumata, Kazuki Sato

TL;DR
This study examines sports injuries in 11,000 Japanese college athletes, finding that training habits and personal characteristics are linked to injury risk.
Contribution
The study identifies specific factors like training frequency and body weight associated with sports injuries in Japanese collegiate athletes.
Findings
Overweight or obese athletes and those training more frequently are more likely to sustain injuries.
Most injuries require significant time off from training and competition.
Excessive training and insufficient recovery are linked to increased injury risk.
Abstract
Background: To establish the 1-year prevalence of sports injuries and explore associations of various factors with a sports injury in Japanese collegiate athletes. Methods: The data were collected through a web-based survey of Japanese collegiate athletes associated with UNIVAS (Japan Association for University Athletics and Sport). The survey questions asked about athletes’ personal characteristics, sports participation, and injuries sustained within the previous year. Follow-up questions on the details regarding the three most serious injuries were asked. Differences in proportions of athlete characteristics between males and females and between injured and uninjured were explored with the chi-square test. Factors associated with sustaining an injury were determined with regression analysis. Results: The prevalence of injuries among Japanese collegiate athletes is high, and most of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComparative International Legal Studies · Administrative Law and Governance
