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ACL injury incidence in female handball 10 years after the Norwegian ACL prevention study: important lessons learned
  1. Grethe Myklebust1,
  2. Arnhild Skjølberg1,2,
  3. Roald Bahr1
  1. 1Oslo Sport Trauma Research Center, Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, Department of Sports Medicine, Oslo, Norway
  2. 2Orkanger Physiotherapy and Osteopathy, Orkanger, Norway
  1. Correspondence to Grethe Myklebust, Department of Sports Medicine, Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center, Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, PO Box 4014 Ullevål Stadion, Oslo 0806, Norway; grethe.myklebust{at}nih.no

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Success in injury prevention in the short run is possible. Several studies have documented that injuries can be prevented if programme compliance is sufficient.1–6 However, the efficacy of an intervention is in a controlled trial does not mean that it will be widely adopted and sustained and have an impact on public health.7–9 Finch9 outlined the Translating Research into Injury Prevention Practice framework, emphasising that only research that can and will be adopted by the participants, the coaches and sporting bodies will succeed in the long run.

Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries is an example where there are controlled studies showing promising efficacy (that the intervention is capable of producing the desired effect);5 ,10–13 however, their efficiency (whether the desired effect occurs under real-life conditions) is not known. We wanted to know ‘Have ACL injury prevention initiatives taken in Norway during the last decade been successful in the long run?’ We report our experience with Norwegian handball as an example, as this is an area where several initiatives (table 1) building on prevention trials have coincided with an ongoing surveillance programme.

Table 1

Prevention initiatives from 1998 through 2011

Norwegian female handball experience: a 13-year and ongoing story

ACL Injury Prevention Study

The 1998–1999 season served as the baseline for the ACL Injury Prevention Study; during the 1999–2000 season, an injury prevention programme was introduced in the top three divisions in female handball in Norway.10 The intervention consisted of a neuromuscular training programme with exercises on a wobble board, a balance mat and handball-specific exercises. In the first season (1999–2000), the intervention was based on coaches delivering the programme after being instructed by the investigators. However, as compliance was low, physical therapists were engaged to take charge of delivery of the programme during the second intervention season (2000–2001). Compared with a baseline rate of 0.48 ACL injuries per team, the incidence during the second intervention season was 0.33 injuries per team (OR 0.64; CI 0.35 to 1.18; p=0.15).10 However, compliance was variable and in the elite division, the risk of injury was much lower among those who completed the prevention programme compared with those who did not (OR 0.06; CI 0.01 to 0.54; p<0.01).10

After the ACL Injury Prevention Study was terminated at the end of the 2000–2001 season, teams were allowed to keep their equipment (balance mats, wobble boards and DVD with the exercises programme), but whether or not teams chose to continue with prevention exercises depended on each team. Also, the physical therapists who took part in the intervention were no longer paid by the Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center to work with the teams. However, elite division teams and some of the first division teams had their own physical therapists who continued their regular work with the teams, but there are no data on how preventive exercises were used. Our injury surveillance showed that from 2001 the ACL injury rate increased gradually to 0.56 injuries per team in the 2004–2005 season (figure 1), that is, at least as high as before the intervention started. Interviews with the players injured during this period also revealed that few of their teams were using the prevention programme (data not shown). This is in contrast to the results presented in the prevention study among female football teenage girls by Kiani et al.4 They found that1 year after finalisation of the study, 44% of the teams did use components of the prevention programme, while 19% of the teams reported using the entire programme.4

Figure 1

ACL injury incidence (# per team per season).

From these interviews with injured players, we realised that the promising findings from the ACL Injury Prevention Study, which were published in 2003, did not result in the programme being implemented as a regular part of the training by coaches or players. Our strategy of using physical therapists to improve compliance with the programme and quality of exercise execution had been a success in the short run; however, it may have taken much of the responsibility for the player education away from the coach.

2005: new DVD-Achilles

To increase knowledge and improve attitudes among coaches and managers, we organised a series of regional coach seminars, free of charge, in 2005. We emphasised the rationale for both prevention and performance benefits when performing this type of exercise.8 At the end of the 2 h seminar, every attendee received a DVD including video clips of all the prevention exercises. We held seminars in Norway's five largest cities, and approximately 500 coaches, managers (and some players) attended.

Research exposure in a peer-reviewed major medical journal

In the same period, the results from a large randomised controlled trial from Norwegian handball by Olsen et al5 were published in BMJ. In this study of 1837 girls and boys aged 15–17 years, we tested a 20 min structured warm-up programme to improve the running, cutting and landing technique as well as neuromuscular control, balance and strength, thus building on the principles of the first programme. The programme reduced the risk of lower extremity injuries by 49% in the intervention group (relative risk intervention group vs control group 0.51, 95% CI 0.36 to 0.73), and the risk of severe knee ligament injuries was also reduced substantially compared with the control group doing regular warm-up exercises (relative risk 0.20, 95% CI 0.06 to 0.70).5

This study received extensive media attention and was also featured in the Norwegian Handball Magazine, received by every member of the Norwegian Handball Federation. In addition, the researchers who were in contact with the coaches to interview them about knee injuries always used the opportunity to remind them of the importance of ACL prevention training.

As shown in figure 1, there was a substantial reduction in the ACL injury rate after we began the information campaign from the 2005 to 2006 season and onwards, compared with the postintervention seasons 2001–2005.

2008: new website & DVD-Skadefri

To strengthen our knowledge translation activities, the Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center launched a new website in May 2008 (http://www.skadefri.no). This has been designed to provide information on an injury prevention programme in a format targeting coaches and athletes, and includes videos of exercises from various prevention programmes (eg, knee, ankle and hamstring injuries). Specifically, the website displays the ACL/knee injury prevention programmes developed in Norway,5 ,6 ,10 but it also includes exercise programmes from other groups working in this field.11

Did teams and players use the programmes?

Since the 2005–2006 season, we have included questions on self-reported compliance with the prevention exercise programmes in our interviews with coaches and injured players (see box 1 for definitions). However, it should be noted that compliance was self-reported by coaches and players and, as illustrated in table 2, there is a substantial discrepancy between coaches and players in their perception of compliance. This could of course mean that, in these cases, the team had a programme which the injured player did not follow, or vice versa. However, it seems more likely that compliance was over-reported by coaches. Therefore, we have not attempted to compare injury rates between compliant versus non-compliant teams.

Box 1

How the data were collected

  • We established the ACL Injury Surveillance Programme in Norwegian handball in 1998 as the basis for data collection for the ACL Injury Prevention Study, which was started the same year.10 The surveillance covered all female teams in the top three divisions in the Norwegian Handball Federation through the 2010–2011 season (May 2011), except for the 2003–2004 season.

  • The Norwegian Handball Federation league system ranks the teams according to their skill level into four teams in most of the six (7) third division conferences. Each division/conference plays a double round-robin competition format from mid-September through mid-April. Two teams advance and two teams are relegated between divisions according to their final league standing at the end of each season. In addition, teams participate in a single-elimination cup for the Norwegian Cup Championship; teams normally also take part in other national and international tournaments throughout the season.

  • We contacted the team coach twice a year by phone to record any ACL injuries. Injury incidence was calculated as the number of ACL injuries reported per team per season. If the coach reported any acute knee injuries occurring during regular handball training or competition, we contacted the injured player by phone to confirm the type and severity of the injury. ACL injuries were verified by MRI and/or arthroscopy.

  • From 2005. we also interviewed the coach and injured players about ACL prevention training. They were categorised as ‘Yes’ if the team (or injured player) had performed knee control exercises focusing on ‘hip-knee-toe’ alignment, corresponding to the exercise prescription used in the ACL Injury Prevention Study. These could be balance exercises on the floor, on a balance mat or a wobble board, as well as jumping exercises with two foot landings and technique training with the same focus. The minimum training volume required was 1–2 times per week during the preseason and at least once weekly during the season. Teams (players) who responded only doing ordinary strength training were categorised as not using prevention training because general strength training is a well-established part of the training schedule for all teams.

Table 2

Compliance as reported by the coach and player (n=125)

Our lessons, clinical implications, suggestions for sports organisations

Our ACL Injury Surveillance Programme has revealed that the ACL injury incidence among Norwegian female handball players has remained low after the introduction of various measures to promote injury prevention exercise programmes (see figure 1). However, we cannot be certain if other changes may have occurred during the same period which have contributed to lower injury rates. If anything, training loads and the intensity of the game have increased during the last decade; if so, injury risk would most likely have increased. However, one factor which may have changed is the quality of flooring in new gyms being built during this period, from old-style high-friction artificial floors to modern materials with less friction.14 Still, there are relatively few new floors, and we believe that it is unlikely that this factor alone can explain the sustained low injury rates observed during recent years.

Helping the individual to make healthy choices (eg, healthy eating, cessation of smoking and active living) is a key feature of health promotion, often combining legislative and engineering measures (eg, laws requiring car manufacturers to put seat belts in cars) with health information (eg, campaigns promoting their use by the individual). In sports, many of the choices which relate to injury risk are made by a coach on behalf of an individual, for good or for bad. This means that in team sports there is a unique opportunity for working with coaches to institute exercise programmes to prevent injury.15

Coach as a key partner

We have tried to take advantage of the coach as a key partner in injury prevention during the last decade . However, this has not been uniformly successful, as our experience from the initial phase of the ACL Injury Prevention Study showed.10 Despite site visits to all teams where we ran practical sessions with players and teams, buy-in among coaches was variable and few teams followed the prescribed programme. To rectify this, we had to engage physical therapists to follow-up the prevention training, which improved compliance substantially. It is therefore not surprising that when our physical therapists withdrew from the clubs after the intervention study, the follow-up by coaches was limited. In some clubs, prevention training was left to the players themselves, and there are controlled trials showing that this approach is ineffective.16 ,17

It is therefore somewhat surprising that the various initiatives which were taken from 2005 onwards seem to have been successful. There are several factors which may explain the sustained low ACL injury rates. First, by 2005, we had ample evidence to show that the programmes developed were efficient. The data from the ACL Injury Prevention Study and the BMJ paper on junior handball had been published,5 ,10 and both studies received substantial attention, both in the media and in the handball community. Similar findings were also reported from studies in other sports and other countries. This meant that the message we delivered to coaches in seminars, through pamphlets, interviews and on our website, was no longer ‘may reduce injury risk’, but ‘will reduce injury risk by at least 50%’. This ‘specific’ information meets one of the Heath Brothers’ criteria for ‘sticky’ messages—messages that have influence.18 This may have been a decisive factor. Another may be the persistent effort to promote injury prevention over several years, using every opportunity available, including the semiannual telephone calls to all coaches in the top three divisions.

Lessons from other settings

Successful injury prevention campaigns are seen in other sports. In New Zealand, rugby union has documented a large reduction in serious spinal injuries after introducing a nationwide injury prevention programme, the ‘RugbySmart program’.19 In a study among Swiss amateur soccer players, a countrywide campaign to prevent soccer injuries was proven to be effective after implementing ‘The 11’.20 More than 5000 coaches were trained, and 4 years later, the number of injuries among teams performing ‘The 11’ was 10.7% (matches) and 25.4% (training) lower than teams not using the programme. In the South African Rugby Union, ‘The BokSmart National Rugby Safety Programme’ is aimed at safer rugby and fewer head, neck and spinal cord injuries.21 The BokSmart programme has four main elements: a DVD-facilitated course for all coaches and referees, an entry-level rugby first aid short course aimed at training members of underprivileged rugby-playing communities, a Spineline number assisting the head-injured, neck-injured and spine-injured rugby players to the nearest appropriate medical facility and finally the online resource http://www.boksmart.com, which provides researched documentation and practical advice on a variety of rugby-related topics.21 The results from their programme are not yet published; however, the comprehensive nature of this initiative is promising. These programmes, as well as our study, exemplify the benefit of educational initiatives in injury prevention and the need for comprehensive injury surveillance systems for evaluating injury prevention initiatives in sport.19

In summary, the Norwegian ACL studies and our experience indicate that the ACL injury rate can be kept low through nationwide preventive initiatives and by focusing on the coach as a key partner. We are yet to figure out which of our initiatives are most effective, as well as the ideal exercise prescription. Risk factor studies are necessary to identify the individual's needs for special training and optimise the selection of preventive exercises. In the meantime, we suggest that team sports include prevention exercises in their warm-up, tailor the exercise programme to the specific sport and focus on coach education as a key factor.

Table 3 shows the number of teams in each division followed between 1998 and 2011, as well as the number of ACL injuries recorded.

Table 3

Total number of teams interviewed and number of ACL injuries recorded in the different seasons and divisions

Acknowledgments

The Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center has been established at the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences through generous grants from the Royal Norwegian Ministry of Culture, the South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority, the International Olympic Committee, the Norwegian Olympic Committee & Confederation of Sport, and Norsk Tipping AS.

References

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Footnotes

  • Contributors All three authors were involved in planning the project, in the follow-up of the teams and players and in the writing the manuscript.

  • Competing interests None.

  • Ethics approval South-Eastern Norway Regional Committee for Research ethics.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.