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High school football and wrestling athletes experienced the highest rate of severe injuries, according to the first study to examine severe injuries – injuries that caused high school athletes to miss more than 21 days of sport participation among a nationally representative sample of high school athletes.
Read more about severe high school football and wrestling injuries »
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Injuries can occur during a sporting competition at any time. However, new research finds that during football, injuries sustained at the beginning or middle of a game are more severe compared to injuries sustained during the end or in overtime. Read more about the timing and severity of football injuries »
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USA Today reports on the risk of concussions in high school sports, as studied by the the Center for Injury Research and Policy at the Nationwide Children's Research Institute. Read the USA Today article
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Nationwide Children’s Hospital Sports Medicine offers a Student Athlete Fitness Enhancement (S.A.F.E.) program. Learn correct and safe techniques to achieve your sports-specific goals from certified athletic trainers. The S. A. F. E. Program includes:
- Goals assessment and equipment orientation
- One month access to the Nationwide Children’s Sports Medicine and Orthopedic Center under the supervision of a Certified Athletic Trainer
- Learn more about the S.A.F.E Program
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Study finds that player-to-player contact was associated with nearly 60 percent of high school athletes’ shoulder injuries from 2005 through 2007, and boys experienced higher shoulder injury rates than girls, particularly in soccer and baseball/softball. Read the news release to learn more.
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