Exceeded sport specialization guidelines result in more injuries — 3 study insights

Orthopedic Sports Medicine

A study published in The American Journal of Sports Medicine examined the effectiveness of sport specialization guidelines.

The guidelines recommend not specializing in one sports and limiting participation in a single sport to less than eight months a year and fewer hours per week than a child's age.

 

Eric Post, of the Madison-based University of Wisconsin, and colleagues conducted a case-controlled study of 989 female athletes and 1,022 male athletes between 12-years-old and 18-years-old.

 

The athletes completed a questionnaire concerning their specialization, yearly and weekly participation and injury history. Researchers classified specialization as low, moderate or high on a three-point scale.

 

Researchers classified athletes as either meeting or exceeding recommendations.

 

Here's what they found.

 

1. Highly specialized athletes were more likely to report a previous or overuse injury in the past year, compared to the low specialization group.

 

2. Athletes who played a single sport more than eight months of the year were more likely to report an upper or lower extremity overuse injury.

 

3. Athletes that played a sport for more hours than their age were more likely to report an injury of any type.

 

Researchers concluded, "High levels of specialization were associated with a history of injuries, independent of age, sex and weekly organized sport volume. Athletes who exceeded volume recommendations were more likely to have a history of overuse injuries."

 

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