Ready or Not; A Narrative Synthesis of Sports Medicine Practitioners' Practices During Return to Play in the Management of Musculoskeletal Injuries
Megan Chetty, Gregory Roe, Ben Jones, Sharief Hendricks

TL;DR
This review summarizes how sports medicine practitioners make return-to-play decisions after musculoskeletal injuries, highlighting the need for clearer guidelines and collaboration.
Contribution
The study provides a narrative synthesis of RTP practices across different practitioner groups and identifies gaps in current decision-making frameworks.
Findings
Knee injuries, especially ACL, are the most studied in RTP decision-making.
Medical doctors focus more on injury timelines, while MDTs consider psychological readiness and sport-specific testing.
Shared decision-making with an athlete-centered approach is preferred, but collaboration and clear tools are lacking.
Abstract
The purpose of this narrative synthesis was to identify and synthesise the literature focused on sports medicine practitioners' (SMPs) decision‐making practices during return to play (RTP) after musculoskeletal (MSK) injury. Using the Preferred Items for Reporting Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses guidelines, four electronic databases were searched from the start of the database to July 2024 using terms related to SMPs and RTP in MSK injury. The Appraisal Tool of Cross‐Sectional Studies (AXIS) and the Johanna Briggs Institute (JBI) critical appraisal tools were used to assess the overall quality of the identified studies. A narrative synthesis format was considered the most appropriate methodological approach to review and synthesise the pool of literature. Data synthesis included the participating SMPs profession, study sample size, injury location, activity level, RTP outcome…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSports injuries and prevention · Knee injuries and reconstruction techniques · Orthopedic Surgery and Rehabilitation
