61 research outputs found
Implementation of the 2017 Berlin Concussion in Sport Group Consensus Statement in contact and collision sports: a joint position statement from 11 national and international sports organisations.
The 2017 Berlin Concussion in Sport Group Consensus Statement provides a global summary of best practice in concussion prevention, diagnosis and management, underpinned by systematic reviews and expert consensus. Due to their different settings and rules, individual sports need to adapt concussion guidelines according to their specific regulatory environment. At the same time, consistent application of the Berlin Consensus Statement's themes across sporting codes is likely to facilitate superior and uniform diagnosis and management, improve concussion education and highlight collaborative research opportunities. This document summarises the approaches discussed by medical representatives from the governing bodies of 10 different contact and collision sports in Dublin, Ireland in July 2017. Those sports are: American football, Australian football, basketball, cricket, equestrian sports, football/soccer, ice hockey, rugby league, rugby union and skiing. This document had been endorsed by 11 sport governing bodies/national federations at the time of being published
The Concussion Recognition Tool 5th Edition (CRT5)
The Concussion Recognition Tool 5 (CRT5) is the
most recent revision of the Pocket Sport Concussion
Assessment Tool 2 that was initially introduced by
the Concussion in Sport Group in 2005. The CRT5 is
designed to assist non-medically trained individuals to
recognise the signs and symptoms of possible sportrelated concussion and provides guidance for removing
an athlete from play/sport and to seek medical attention.
This paper presents the development of the CRT5 and
highlights the differences between the CRT5 and prior
versions of the instrument
The utility of the Sports Concussion Assessment Tool in hospitalized traumatic brain injury patients
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