TY - JOUR
T1 - Para athlete concussion care following the Amsterdam 2022 International Consensus Statement on Concussion in Sport: an urgent need for inclusivity within concussion research
AU - Weiler, Richard
AU - Dalton, Kristine
AU - Guenther, Anna
AU - Mitchell, Katelyn
AU - Van de Vliet, Peter
AU - Babul, Shelina
AU - Blauwet, Cheri
AU - Clarke, David
AU - Dea, Jenny
AU - Derman, Wayne
AU - Emery, Carolyn
AU - Fagher, Kristina
AU - Gouttebarge, Vincent
AU - Haider, Mohammad Nadir
AU - Hunt, Tamerah
AU - Lee, Kenneth
AU - Lexell, Jan
AU - Moran, Ryan N
AU - Pilon, Francine
AU - Prince, Francois
AU - Runciman, Phoebe
AU - Smetana, Racheal
AU - Verhagen, Evert
AU - Webborn, Nick
AU - Ahmed, Osman Hassan
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - The Amsterdam 2022 International Consensus Statement on Concussion in Sport (6th International Conference on Concussion in Sport) was the first Concussion in Sport Group (CISG) consensus to consider the para athlete.1 To date, a lack of research in para sport on most aspects of concussion has prevented the development of evidence-informed consensus on any aspects of concussion care for para athletes, resulting in a reliance on expert opinion.2 3 Prior to 2023, all CISG guidelines used the default that athletes all have ‘normal’ cognitive and neuromuscular (central and peripheral) functions. This default is not representative of the global population, and discounts para athletes who have impairments with wide heterogeneity, which may be visible or invisible.In 2021 the Concussion in Para Sport (CIPS) group, an international, voluntary, multidisciplinary group of para concussion-focused clinicians, researchers and athletes published the first position statement on concussion in para sport, which built on the 2017 CISG Consensus Statement.4 The prospective International Paralympic Committee injury and illness surveillance studies started in 2012, and while concussions were reported at the Pyeong Chang 2018 Paralympic Winter Games (n=4),5 the first detailed concussion information was reported for the Tokyo 2020 (n=9) and Beijing 2022 (n=4) Paralympic Games.6 7Following publication of the Amsterdam 2022 Consensus on Concussion in Sport, the CIPS group present this editorial to (1) highlight that the guidance outlined in the first CIPS Position Statement can be adapted and applied to this most recent Amsterdam 2022 Consensus Statement …
AB - The Amsterdam 2022 International Consensus Statement on Concussion in Sport (6th International Conference on Concussion in Sport) was the first Concussion in Sport Group (CISG) consensus to consider the para athlete.1 To date, a lack of research in para sport on most aspects of concussion has prevented the development of evidence-informed consensus on any aspects of concussion care for para athletes, resulting in a reliance on expert opinion.2 3 Prior to 2023, all CISG guidelines used the default that athletes all have ‘normal’ cognitive and neuromuscular (central and peripheral) functions. This default is not representative of the global population, and discounts para athletes who have impairments with wide heterogeneity, which may be visible or invisible.In 2021 the Concussion in Para Sport (CIPS) group, an international, voluntary, multidisciplinary group of para concussion-focused clinicians, researchers and athletes published the first position statement on concussion in para sport, which built on the 2017 CISG Consensus Statement.4 The prospective International Paralympic Committee injury and illness surveillance studies started in 2012, and while concussions were reported at the Pyeong Chang 2018 Paralympic Winter Games (n=4),5 the first detailed concussion information was reported for the Tokyo 2020 (n=9) and Beijing 2022 (n=4) Paralympic Games.6 7Following publication of the Amsterdam 2022 Consensus on Concussion in Sport, the CIPS group present this editorial to (1) highlight that the guidance outlined in the first CIPS Position Statement can be adapted and applied to this most recent Amsterdam 2022 Consensus Statement …
U2 - 10.1136/bjsports-2024-108871
DO - 10.1136/bjsports-2024-108871
M3 - Debate/Note/Editorial
C2 - 39510817
SN - 1473-0480
VL - 59
SP - 5
EP - 7
JO - British Journal of Sports Medicine
JF - British Journal of Sports Medicine
IS - 1
ER -