Article Text
Abstract
Background There is randomised controlled trial (RCT) evidence that neuromuscular training (NMT) programmes can reduce the risk of injury in youth soccer. We evaluated the cost-effectiveness of such an NMT prevention strategy compared to a standard of practice warm-up.
Methods A cost-effectiveness analysis was conducted alongside a cluster RCT. Injury incidence rates were adjusted for cluster using Poisson regression analyses. Direct healthcare costs and injury incidence proportions were adjusted for cluster using bootstrapping. The joint uncertainty surrounding the cost and injury rate and proportion differences was estimated using bootstrapping with 10 000 replicates.
Results Along with a 38% reduction in injury risk (rate difference=−1.27/1000 player hours (95% CI −0.33 to −2.2)), healthcare costs were reduced by 43% in the NMT group (−$689/1000 player hours (95% CI −$1741 to $234)) compared with the control group. 90% of the bootstrapped ratios were in the south-west quadrant of the cost-effectiveness plane, showing that the NMT programme was dominant (more effective and less costly) over standard warm-up. Projecting results onto 58 100 Alberta youth soccer players, an estimated 4965 injuries and over $2.7 million in healthcare costs would be conservatively avoided in one season with implementation of a neuromuscular training prevention programme.
Conclusions Implementation of an NMT prevention programme in youth soccer is effective in reducing the burden of injury and leads to considerable reduction in costs. These findings inform practice and policy supporting the implementation of NMT prevention strategies in youth soccer nationally and internationally.
- Injuries
- Injury
- Injury prevention
- Soccer
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Footnotes
Contributors DAM contributed to the conception and design of the cost-effectiveness analysis, the analysis and interpretation, drafting of the article, provided final approval and agrees to act as a guarantor of the work; EL contributed to the cost-effectiveness analysis and its interpretation, drafting of the article, provided final approval and is the guarantor; SL contributed to the cost-effectiveness analysis and its interpretation, reviewed the article critically, provided final approval and is the guarantor; CAE contributed to the acquisition of the data, design of the cost-effectiveness analysis, the analysis and interpretation, drafting of the article, provided final approval and is the guarantor.
Funding Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Alberta Innovates Health Solutions, Arthur J.E. Child Chair.
Competing interests None declared.
Ethics approval University of Calgary, Office of Medical Bioethics.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.