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UEFA Women’s Elite Club Injury Study wins publication award

Medical

UEFA study receives award from a prestigious sports medicine journal.

2024 UEFA Women's Champions League final  between FC Barcelona and Olympique Lyonnais at San Mames Stadium in Bilbao, Spain. (Photo by David Ramos/Getty Images)
2024 UEFA Women's Champions League final between FC Barcelona and Olympique Lyonnais at San Mames Stadium in Bilbao, Spain. (Photo by David Ramos/Getty Images) Getty Images

The UEFA Women’s Elite Club Injury Study examining risk factors for hamstring injuries in women’s football has received the Best Paper Award for 2022–23 from the prestigious sports medicine journal Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy (KSSTA).

UEFA has long been at the vanguard in the development of surveys focusing on the safety of players in professional football.

In 2001, UEFA initiated a research project for men's elite-level teams in Europe. The Elite Club Injury Study has been conducted every season for 24 years and data has been collected for 19,000 injuries in around 50 top teams during 3 million hours of exposure to training and matches.

In 2017, UEFA started the Women’s Elite Club Injury Study. This is the first and only continuous and ongoing survey on women’s elite football and follows the same design as the men's injury study.

Muscle injuries, and especially injuries to the rear of the thigh (hamstring injuries), are the most common injury at both men’s and women’s elite level. Hamstring injuries, often referred to as ‘sprinter’s injuries’, occur during high-intensity actions, reflecting the high intensity and speed of actions in modern elite-level football.

The purpose of the award-winning study was to describe the perceived importance of suggested hamstring injury risk factors according to the chief medical officers of European women’s professional football clubs.

Most risk factors were extrinsic in nature, associated with the coaching staff, team or club organisation rather than with the players themselves. The risk factors with the highest average importance were found to be lack of communication between medical staff and coaching staff, and load on players.

“UEFA has for many years led the development of surveys aimed at reducing injuries and increasing player safety in professional football,” says Jan Ekstrand, who led the team of scientists that conducted the award-winning study.

“We, as authors of this paper feel grateful and honoured by this award. The honour goes also to UEFA, which has initiated, funded and supported the study. This study represents a recognition to UEFA and its pioneering work to protect the health of football players.”

The full publication can be found here.