TY - JOUR T1 - 2016 Rio Olympics: an epidemiological study of the men’s and women’s Rugby-7s tournaments JF - British Journal of Sports Medicine JO - Br J Sports Med SP - 1272 LP - 1278 DO - 10.1136/bjsports-2016-097301 VL - 51 IS - 17 AU - Colin W Fuller AU - Aileen Taylor AU - Martin Raftery Y1 - 2017/09/01 UR - http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/51/17/1272.abstract N2 - Objective To determine the incidence, severity and nature of injuries sustained during the men’s and women’s 2014/2015 and 2015/2016 Sevens World Series (SWS) and 2016 Olympic Games Rugby Sevens tournaments.Design A prospective cohort study.Participants All players from the core teams competing in the men’s and women’s 2014/2015 and 2015/2016 SWS (men: 15 teams; women: 11 teams) and all players from the men’s (12 teams) and women’s (12 teams) 2016 Rio Olympics tournaments.Results The gold, silver and bronze medal-winning women’s teams contained bigger players (body mass and stature) than other teams but the men’s medal winning teams came from across the size spectrum of men’s teams competing at Rio 2016. The incidences of injury in the men’s tournaments (2014/2015 SWS: 107.7 injuries/1000 player-match-hours (95% CI 90.9 to 127.4); 2015/2016 SWS: 109.7 (95% CI 93.7 to 128.6); Rio 2016: 124.5 (95% CI 73.7 to 210.2)) were higher but not statistically significant than those in the equivalent women’s tournaments (2014/2015 SWS: 88.5 (95% CI 68.4 to 114.5), p=0.250; 2015/2016 SWS: 109.4 (95% CI 84.2 to 142.2), p=0.984; Rio 2016: 71.1 (95% CI 35.6 to 142.2), p=0.208). There were no statistically significant differences between the incidences of injury at the men’s and women’s 2016 Rio Olympics and the equivalent 2014/2015 (men: p=0.603; women: p=0.562) and 2015/2016 (men: p=0.652; women: p=0.254) SWS.Conclusions The incidence, severity and nature of the injuries sustained during the men’s and women’s Rio 2016 Rugby-7s tournaments fell within the normal range of values for international Rugby-7s tournaments. ER -