PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Christopher Vaughan AU - Gerard Gioia AU - Maegan Sady TI - School problems following sports concussion. Which children are at greatest risk? AID - 10.1136/bjsports-2012-092101.45 DP - 2013 Apr 01 TA - British Journal of Sports Medicine PG - e1--e1 VI - 47 IP - 5 4099 - http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/47/5/e1.40.short 4100 - http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/47/5/e1.40.full SO - Br J Sports Med2013 Apr 01; 47 AB - Objective Identify risk for adverse outcomes in school performance and attendance following concussion. Design Correlational. Setting Outpatient clinic, teaching hospital. Participants 216 children ages 12–18 (mean (SD)=15.1 (1.6); 70% male) seen within 2 months of sport-related concussion (mean days since injury=21.2 (12.6)). Interventions Predictors: Pre-injury risk/post-concussion symptoms, injury characteristics. Main Outcome Measurements Reported drop in grades, days of school absence. Results Correlation and crosstabs revealed no association between a drop in grades and a personal or family history of developmental delays, pre-injury school performance, developmental disabilities, or previous concussions. Higher maternal education and retrospective pre-injury symptoms were significantly associated with lower grades. Total post-injury symptom burden (parent and child reported) and physical exertional symptoms were not related, although presence of amnesia/loss of consciousness and cognitive exertional effects (symptom exacerbation) were significantly associated with lower grades. No pre-injury risk factors were correlated with school absence, but symptom burden at time of injury and subsequent parent/child symptom report at time of evaluation were positively associated with number of days absent from school. Conclusions Varying post-concussion factors are related to school outcomes. Pre-injury risk factors (higher baseline symptoms, maternal education) and post-injury factors (LOC/amnesia, cognitive exertional effects) related to drop in grades. In contrast, symptom burden at injury and later severity was related to days absent from school. These findings provide the clinician with useful indicators of possible risk factors for adverse outcomes in school performance, an important issue in concussion management for children. Competing interests None.