A Review of Sports-Related, Life-Threatening Injuries Presenting to Emergency Departments, 2009–18
Abiye Ibiebele, Rebekah Mannix, William Meehan

TL;DR
This study finds that about 13% of life-threatening injuries in emergency departments are sports-related, with a higher rate among children.
Contribution
The study updates the proportion of life-threatening sports-related injuries in the U.S. over a 10-year period using recent data.
Findings
13% of life-threatening injuries in EDs were sports-related from 2009–2018.
Pediatric patients had a significantly higher proportion of sports-related life-threatening injuries than adults.
There was a decrease in the proportion of life-threatening sports-related injuries to the head and neck over the study period.
Abstract
In the United States, 3.7 million people present to an emergency department (ED) annually with an injury related to sports or athletic activity. A prior study a decade ago revealed that 14% of life-threatening injuries presenting to EDs were sports related, with this percentage being higher in the pediatric population. However, with changes in sports participation and regulatory changes over the past decade, it is unclear whether the proportion of life-threatening sports-related injuries has changed. We conducted a cross-sectional study using the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS), consisting of patients from years 2009–2018. Life-threatening injuries were defined as International Classification of Diseases 9 and 10 codes for skull fracture, cervical spine fractures, intracranial hemorrhage, traumatic pneumothorax/hemothorax, liver lacerations, spleen…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTrauma and Emergency Care Studies · Sports injuries and prevention
