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UnknownNCT04856241

Making Football Safer for Women: Implementing an Injury Prevention Program

Prep-to-Play: Comparing the Impact of Supported and Unsupported Implementation Strategies on the Use of an Injury Prevention Program in Women's/Girl's Community Football

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
2,600 (estimated)
Sponsor
La Trobe University · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
14 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The aim of this study is to determine how we can best support coaches to implement an injury prevention (IP) program (Prep-to-Play) in female community Australian Football. We will recruit at least 140 female community football teams from 15 different football leagues in Victoria, Australia. Teams will be competing in U16, U17, U18, U19 or open womens competitions. We will train and support coaches to implement the IP program and evaluate the effects of the IP program on injuries across two football seasons.

Detailed description

Primary Aim: To compare the impact of supported and unsupported implementation strategies on the use of an IP program (Prep-to-Play) in female community Australian Football. Secondary aims are to: 1. Evaluate the effects of supported implementation of Prep-to-Play on injury risk reduction. 2. Identify barriers and enablers to sustainability of the Prep-to-Play implementation model, and develop clear recommendations for a future, sustainable national roll out of Prep-to-Play. 3. Evaluate the cost-effectiveness of Prep-to-Play. Primary hypothesis The primary hypothesis is that supported implementation will result in increased use of Prep-to-Play in female community Australian Football compared to unsupported implementation. Secondary hypotheses The secondary hypotheses are that the supported implementation of Prep-to-Play will: * result in a reduction of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries in females participating in community Australian Football; * result in a reduction of other musculoskeletal injuries and concussion among females participating in community Australian Football; * be more cost-effective than the unsupported implementation.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCoachingPhysiotherapists (trained by the research team) train the coaches to deliver Prep-to-Play. The Physiotherapists will also provide face-to-face one-to-one support to each coach at their team's training session (two visits), with all their players.
OTHERPeer supportCoaches shed. Coaches provide each other with support and ideas. Strategies to overcome barriers and motivate players.
OTHEREducational materialsPrep-to-Play program resources are available online for coaches and players to view

Timeline

Start date
2021-04-22
Primary completion
2025-04-13
Completion
2025-12-21
First posted
2021-04-23
Last updated
2023-10-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Australia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04856241. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.