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Pressured to Play? Report finds Young Athletes on the Field with Injuries

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Friday, August 15, 2014   

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Young athletes are taking to the field, track and turf in Ohio as fall sports begin, and a new survey finds a growing number will likely face injuries during the season.

According to research from Safe Kids Worldwide, an alarming number of young people are injured as a result of aggressive play, hiding injuries to stay in the game, and parents who pressure coaches to keep them on the field.

Safe Kids' President and CEO Kate Carr says parents, coaches and players should have their own huddle before the season and set some ground rules to prevent injuries.

"You can discuss dirty play, hard fouls, how you're going to deal with them,” she says. “You can discuss the training of a coach.

“You can discuss parental behavior on the sidelines. You can talk to athletes about the importance of speaking up."

It's estimated that nationally, 3,400 children seek medical treatment every day for sports injuries.

Carr says more than half of athletes reported playing while injured, and more than half of coaches said they felt pressured to put injured players back in the game.

She warns this behavior just leads to bigger problems down the road.

"The injury that you play with could be compounded in that game or in that practice,” she explains. “A lot of injuries happen during practice, and that could result in a lifetime of a more serious challenge that you have to face physically, rather than missing a single game."

Carr adds proper technique, strength training and stretching all can help prevent injuries.

And she encourages young athletes to only participate in one sport at a time to prevent overuse injuries.





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