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Injury incidence and severity in pre-professional musical theatre dancers: a 5-year prospective study
Stephens, Nicola ; Nevill, Alan ;
Stephens, Nicola
Nevill, Alan
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2021-06-07
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Abstract
Dance injury research has mainly focused on ballet and modern dance with little data on musical theatre dancers. The purpose was to assess the incidence and severity of injuries in a musical theatre dance college over a 5-year period; 198 pre-professional musical theatre dancers (3 cohorts on a 3-year training course) volunteered for the study; 21 students left the course over the study period. Injury aetiology data were collected by an in-house physiotherapy team. Differences between academic year and sex were analysed using a Poisson distribution model; significant difference was set at p≤0.05. In total 913 injuries were recorded, more injuries occurred in academic year 1 than year 2 and 3. Overall injury incidence was 1.46 injuries per 1000 hours (95%CI 1.34, 1.56); incidence significantly decreased between year 1, 2 and 3 (p<0.05). There was no significant sex difference for incidence or severity. Most injuries were classified as overuse (71% female, 67% male). Pre-professional musical theatre dancers report a high proportion of lower limb and overuse injuries that is comparable to other dance genres. Unlike other studies on pre-professional dancers; injury incidence and severity decreased with academic year, even though workload increased across the course.
Citation
Stephens, N., Nevill, A. and Wyon, M. (2021) Injury incidence and severity in pre-professional musical theatre dancers: a 5-year prospective study, International Journal of Sports Medicine, 42 (13), pp. 1222-1227. DOI: 10.1055/a-1393-6151
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Journal article
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en
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This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Thieme in International Journal of Sports Medicine, available online at: https://www.thieme-connect.de/products/ejournals/abstract/10.1055/a-1393-6151
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0172-4622