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SPORTS INJURIES AND MEN?S HEALTH: HOW SERIOUS IS THE PROBLEM?
The rate of injury from involvement in sport varies significantly from sport to sport, both in kind and frequency, but participation in virtually any sport carries some risk of injury. In some sports, such as boxing, karate and wrestling, the risk of injury is almost inevitable. In other sports, such as motor racing, especially motorcycle racing and Formula 1 racing, injuries are sometimes fatal.
Although injuries from participation in team sports are generally less severe than in some of the sports mentioned above, the rate of injuries from those sports most commonly played in Australia are surprisingly and worryingly high. According to Inside and Out, a recent publication of the Australian Council for Health, Physical Education and Recreation (ACHPER), Australian Rules football presents the highest overall number of injuries, with approximately 492 000 players and 246 000 injuries, followed by soccer (488 000 players/146 250 injuries); cricket (560 226 players/89 000 injuries); rugby league (160 000 players/80 000 injuries); rugby union (104 000 players/52 000 injuries); netball (374 643 players/37 464 injuries); hockey (193 000 players/28 950 injuries); indoor cricket (400 000 players/28 000 injuries) and basketball (142 955 players/21 300 injuries). Although ACHPER’s estimates of the overall number of sporting injuries are helpful, the rate of injury for players participating in the foregoing team sports is not made explicit, but can tentatively be deduced from the numbers provided. The three sports with the highest rate of injury for participants are Australian football, rugby league and rugby union, with a staggering one out of every two, or half of all players injured each year.
Although many injuries are relatively minor, some are not. The term ‘injury’ is used by ACHPER to indicate any condition of bodily harm which causes an athlete to seek medical help or first aid, leave a game or be forced to miss training or a game. To put the numbers in perspective, ACHPER reports that one in seventeen Australians or nearly one million people suffer from a sporting injury each year, of which some 40 000 require hospitalisation or surgery. The report also makes clear that there is more than just the personal cost of suffering and debilitation for the athletes concerned ? the direct cost to the community for treatment of sporting injuries is between 333 million and 400 million dollars each year.
In light of these figures, it is clear that it is in the interest of players, coaches and the community to do whatever can be done to minimise the risk of sporting injuries. Prevention is still the best medicine, but prevention presupposes education and a sound working knowledge of the nature of sports injuries and their causes.
*33/107/2*



