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Lessons on Data Collection and Curation From the NFL Injury Surveillance Program

Overview
Journal Sports Health
Publisher Sage Publications
Specialty Orthopedics
Date 2019 Jul 3
PMID 31265352
Citations 23
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Background: "Research-ready" evidence platforms that link sports data with anonymized electronic health records (EHRs) or other data are important tools for evaluating injury occurrence in response to changes in games, training, rules, and other factors. While there is agreement that high-quality data are essential, there is little evidence to guide data curation.

Hypothesis: We hypothesized that an EHR used in the course of clinical care and curated for research readiness can provide a robust evidence platform. Our purpose was to describe the data curation used for active injury surveillance by the National Football League (NFL).

Study Design: Dynamic cohort study.

Level Of Evidence: Level 2.

Methods: Players provide informed consent for research activities through the collective bargaining process. A league-wide EHR is used to record injuries that come to the attention of the teams' athletic trainers and physicians, NFL medical spotters, or unaffiliated neurotrauma consultants. Information about football activities and injuries are linkable by player, setting, and event to other sports-related data, including game statistics and game-day stadium quality measures, using a unique player identification designed to protect player privacy. Ongoing data curation is used to review data completeness and accuracy and is adjusted over time in response to findings.

Results: The core data curation activities include monthly injury summaries to team staff, queries to resolve incomplete reporting, and periodic external checks. Experiences derived from producing more than 100 reports per year on diverse topics are used to update coding training and related guidance documents in response to missing data or inconsistent coding that is observed. Roughly 20% more injuries were recorded for the same "reportable" injuries after switching from targeted reporting to an EHR.

Conclusion: Research-ready databases need systematic curation for quality and completeness, along with related action plans. More injuries were reported through EHR than through targeted reporting.

Clinical Relevance: Evidence-driven decision-making thrives on reliable data fine-tuned through systematic use, review, and ongoing adjustments to the curation process.

Citing Articles

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Injury and illness surveillance monitoring in team sports: a framework for all.

Sprouse B, Chandran A, Rao N, Boltz A, Johnson M, Hennis P Inj Epidemiol. 2024; 11(1):23.

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Distal Tibiofibular Syndesmosis Injuries in the National Football League (NFL): A Spectrum of Pathology That Correlates With Time to Return to Full Participation.

Kuhn A, Coughlin M, McGonegle S, Herzog M, Weir N, Meade Spratley E Sports Health. 2024; 17(2):404-411.

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Publicly available data sources in sport-related concussion research: a caution for missing data.

Bretzin A, DAlonzo B, van der Mei E, Gravel J, Wiebe D Inj Epidemiol. 2024; 11(1):3.

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Epidemiology of Stingers in the National Football League, 2015-2019.

Lamplot J, Petit C, Lee R, Mack C, Herzog M, Solomon G Sports Health. 2024; 16(4):565-572.

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