How People Get Injuries and Stopped Doing Sports?: Yenuli Siyambalapitiya

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Yenuli Siyambalapitiya

How people get Injuries and stopped doing Sports?

Introduction
Injury is inevitable in sports; therefore, a deep knowledge of the various sports injuries, the causes and the
risk factors are useful [Adepoju, 2010] According to Amarvi (2010) the word injury is the meaning wrong
or faulty. In relation to this, defined injured joint as that which has been subjected to a wrongful treatment
orientation leading to the damage of its structure framework partially or completely. But more than 1000
people per year in the world has got big injuries and stopped doing sports for their entire life (Clatchie 2020)

but when people got big injuries, they stopped doing sports and sometimes they get ill. Athletes can sustain
minor injuries that last only a few days. They can, however, be seriously injured and operatively treated.
Causes
Injury from sports have reached almost epidemic proportion and this calls for the need to
spend more time on the prevention and less time in the handling of injury after they have
already occurred. The injury frequency is rather high among sportsmen stated that 17 million
sports [Parkkari, Kujala & Kannus, 2015]. Men in the United States of America suffer injury
every year. Haggled et al (2015) found that between 65 — 95 % of Swedish elite football players
(male) reported a dangerous injury such sprain ankle and many other injuries every year.
Consequences
More than 1 million people get injured per a Year while doing sports. When the players got
injured, they should take right actions for heal their injury (Umile Giuseppe Longo 2014). When
people get injuries like broke their legs and other big injuries, they stopped doing sports

What is the Global perspective of this issue?

All over the world lots of people get injure in a year. Injuries are an important public health
concern, and remain a growing problem in some countries. Two of the three leading causes of
injury deaths – road traffic injuries and falls – are predicted to rise in rank compared to other
causes of death.
More than 10 million people get injured by doing sport. People playing football and basketball
are getting more injured. And people get big injuries like broke the leg and so on
From the age 20 – 40 lots of people have got injuries in head, facial, shoulder, ankle and the
knee
From all of these more than 60% of people had got injuries in ankle and the knee. Experience of
pain may be influenced by factors such as susceptibility and physical activity.
Yenuli Siyambalapitiya

https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/common-sports-injuries-incidence-average-charges-0

The table shows how many people had got injuries from 2010 – 2015

Year Types of the sport Number of people had got


injuries
2010 – 2011 Football 2500
2011 – 2012 Soccer 2000
2012 – 2013 Rugby 1000
2013 – 2014 Netball 550

What is the National Perspective of this issue?


Canada
Hockey is the sport most associated with brain injuries, in Canada – which is perhaps
unsurprising considering the sport’s popularity and prominence in Canadian culture. The
physical component to the game, coupled with the large volumes of Canadians who play the
game every winter, resulted in more than 3,000 ED visits in Alberta and Ontario for brain
injuries last year. (Eleina pertide 2019)
Yenuli Siyambalapitiya

Australia

Australians suffer more than 5.2 people suffer sport-related injuries per year. For males, the
sports that most frequently led to hospitalization were football (all codes) (38%), cycling (12%)
and wheeled motor sports (8%). For females, they were football (15%), netball (10%; 13% when
combined with basketball) and equestrian activities (11%). Falls are the most common cause of
both hospitalizations and deaths from injury in Australia

Italy

The annual number of sports injury deaths for a population of 8.5 M insured athletes is 56.
Since 15 M Italians are regularly or occasionally sporting it can be estimated that the total
annual number of deaths is about 100, to which another 20 should be added for the 20 M. Total
number of severe sports injuries per year in the active population of 35M would be around
105.000. [ Guptha allha 2019]

Different Perspective

In Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand, sports medicine is well established and a
standard offering in both the public and private sectors. A

Personal perspective

There are more than 10000 people in the world who have got injuries that they can’t even walk
and if it is a child sometimes the students will bully he or she and they may be unhappy. People
sometimes may cause to death by doing sports, this is a major issue
Courses of Action
The big issue is that when people get big injuries the stopped sports as they can’t do them to
this, we have lots of solutions: -

 People don’t have leges that means they lost their leg with a previous sport event they
can wear fake legs and do sports again.
 We have to be a proper sporting gear.
 We should help the people who can’t do sports

Evaluation of Sources
Yenuli Siyambalapitiya

Before making this report, I didn’t have much knowledge of this research question. I used
reliable research articles from search engines such as Google and Google scholar, this article
also includes information from age group 2014 – 2021. I have looked at the most reasonable
documents. I am sure this report has lots of important facts.

Conclusion
By making this report I have gain more knowledge about injuries and how to prevent and also
how many people stopped doing sport because of dangerous injuries. And also, how to help
them do sport again. We all should do sports by getting the rules and regulations so that we
won’t get injures or any harmful thing by doing sports

References

•By - TONY [PHD] Department of Physical and Health Education -


https://www.researchgate.net/publication/286446970
•British Medical Bulletin Advance Access published August 14, 2015 –
file:///C:/Users/Mit-PC3363/Downloads/SportsOutcomesReviewBMBGougoulias.pdf
•W.H.O (PDF)
https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/149798/9789241508018_eng.pdf
•S. Hinton & S. D. Melanie (Eds.), Professional Practice in Sport Psychology: A Review. London:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/288860456
•Department of Physical Education and Sports Science, National Institute of Education, Nan
yang Technological University,
http://www.smj.org.sg/sites/default/files/5410/5410co1.pdf
•By Elena Putrid -
https://ec.europa.eu/health/ph_projects/1999/injury/fp_injury_1999_frep_20_en.pdf
Yenuli Siyambalapitiya

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