Competitive Anxiety as a Predictor of the Occurrence, Quantity, and Severity of Injuries in Young Cuban Athletes
Jesús Ríos-Garit, Yanet Pérez-Surita, Verónica Gómez-Espejo, Mario Reyes-Bossio, Verónica Tutte-Vallarino

TL;DR
This study shows that competitive anxiety in young athletes is linked to more frequent and severe sports injuries, highlighting the need for psychological support in sports programs.
Contribution
The study identifies competitive anxiety as a novel predictor of injury occurrence, quantity, and severity in young athletes.
Findings
Injured athletes showed significantly higher overall competitive anxiety compared to non-injured athletes.
Higher levels of competitive anxiety were associated with more injuries and greater injury severity.
Managing cognitive anxiety and maintaining self-confidence can help reduce injury risk in young athletes.
Abstract
Public health relevance—How does this work relate to a public health issue? Sports injuries in young people are a growing problem that affects physical health, psychological well-being, and continuity in sports.Competitive anxiety emerges as a psychological risk factor that influences the occurrence, number, and severity of injuries. Sports injuries in young people are a growing problem that affects physical health, psychological well-being, and continuity in sports. Competitive anxiety emerges as a psychological risk factor that influences the occurrence, number, and severity of injuries. Public health significance—Why is this work of significance to public health? It connects physical health and mental health, showing that emotional states directly influence musculoskeletal integrity.It reinforces the need to incorporate psychological assessment into prevention programs, optimizing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSport Psychology and Performance · Sports injuries and prevention · Traumatic Brain Injury Research
