Main Article Content

An Intervention Plan for Preventing and Handling Amateur Soccer Players’ Injuries


M.A. Bakarman
M. Tashkandi
N.S. Mohammed

Abstract

Background: The majority of amateur soccer players are vulnerable to soccer-related injuries and many such injuries are avoidable with an adequate education.


Aim: The present study aimed to measure the impact of an intervention educational plan on improving amateur soccer players’ knowledge  and skills in preventing and handling soccer-related injuries.


Subjects and Methods: The study design is a group-clustered randomized intervention- control trial, and it was carried out in Taif city, Saudi Arabia. The “Neighborhood League of Football” players were randomly allocated to a soccer injury  prevention education group (intervention group) and a control group. A predesigned and validated questionnaire was used to study the changes in  knowledge and skills about soccer injuries before the intervention (response a) and after (response b).


Results: The study included 246 participants in the  intervention group and 256 in the control group (n = 502). The median age was 22 years. The comparison of both groups› participants› performance  showed significant differences in response b analyses and participants in the intervention group achieved significantly higher scores than the control  group in total score levels (P < .0001), injury mechanisms (P < .0001), injury treatment and prevention (P < .0001), and health status (P < .034). The  intervention group›s scores on response b (after the educational sessions) were significantly higher than response a (before the educational sessions, P <  0.001).


Conclusions: In multiple scales and overall score levels, intervention group participants achieved significantly higher scores than their control  group counterparts. Educational assistance appears to have had a good impact on their knowledge and skills.          


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2229-7731
print ISSN: 1119-3077