2020
DOI: 10.1080/1750984x.2020.1824243
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Under-reporting of sport-related concussions by adolescent athletes: a systematic review

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Cited by 36 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…13 Unfortunately, however, previous studies consistently show that adolescent athletes fail to report symptoms of their concussions. 35 Parents found themselves advocating for their teen in situations where others did not understand or were not educated on the impact of an SRC and/or denied that an injury had even occurred, which is similar to the experiences that parents in Daprano, Davies, and Berstein 23 had with school and athletic staff. In concert with a support group, parents may also benefit from a roadmap to help navigate through their teen's recovery process and effectively advocate for them.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…13 Unfortunately, however, previous studies consistently show that adolescent athletes fail to report symptoms of their concussions. 35 Parents found themselves advocating for their teen in situations where others did not understand or were not educated on the impact of an SRC and/or denied that an injury had even occurred, which is similar to the experiences that parents in Daprano, Davies, and Berstein 23 had with school and athletic staff. In concert with a support group, parents may also benefit from a roadmap to help navigate through their teen's recovery process and effectively advocate for them.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…Additionally, to improve player reporting, it may be beneficial for parents to assure their children that (1) their health is more important than competitive goals, (2) the faster the SRC is reported by the player, the quicker the athlete can return to play, and (3) the parent will not be disappointed in their child if they experience a SRC. These points reflect the barriers to SRC reporting cited in the literature (e.g., Chrisman et al, 2013;Ferdinand Pennock et al, 2020;Wallace et al, 2017). Experimental research can test which messages have the greatest influence on athletes' SRC attitudes through parent-child as well as coach-player communication.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We also identified MDC cut-offs for endorsed symptoms as ≥1 for the aerobic component, ≥2 for the dynamic component, and ≤3 for total EXiT symptoms. Despite recent evidence to suggest concussion-associated symptoms increase following exertion among healthy athletes 38,40 and are prone to underreporting by athletes motivated to return to sport, 9,12 symptom provocation is the primary criterion in current postconcussion exertion evaluations to inform RTP. Although symptom reporting will always be subjective, the MDC scores identified in the current study may suggest a better method for evaluating symptom provocation during EXiT.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%