@Buccigross This study suggests that bodychecking experience does not protect youth ice hockey players from injury, and provides further evidence in support of removing bodychecking in youth ice hockey to reduce rates of injury and concussion.https://t.c
You get weaker by exposure to repetitive head impacts, especially for kids... https://t.co/fb30hfNEno
RT @LiveActiveYEG: Youth hockey players with more years of #bodychecking experience were at significantly higher risk of #concussion than p…
Youth hockey players with more years of #bodychecking experience were at significantly higher risk of #concussion than peers who have less bodychecking experience, according to new research by @SIPRC_ the Canadian Medical Association Journal ( @CMAJ ). htt
Youth hockey players with more years of #bodychecking experience were at significantly higher risk of #concussion than peers who have less bodychecking experience, according to new research by @SIPRC_in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (@CMAJ). ht
RT @StopCTE: Among ice hockey players aged 15–17 years who participated in leagues permitting bodychecking, more experience with bodychecki…
Among ice hockey players aged 15–17 years who participated in leagues permitting bodychecking, more experience with bodychecking did not protect against injury. This provides further support for removing bodychecking from youth ice hockey. https://t.co/Ee
Kids playing hockey… Bottom line: ❌Don’t body check The adage, “more experience reduces injury” is… wrong 😵 @CMAJ @SIPRC_ https://t.co/bxGFtpjZDh
RT @CMAJ: Does bodychecking experience protect teen hockey players from injury? New study shows youth (under 18) playing league ice hockey…
Does bodychecking experience protect teen hockey players from injury? New study shows youth (under 18) playing league ice hockey with more years of bodychecking experience had higher rates of all injury. Learn more (and earn CPD credits): https://t.co/qH7
Bodychecking experience and rates of injury among ice hockey players aged 15–17 years https://t.co/BsWZsXmSOz
Bodychecking experience and rates of injury among ice hockey players aged 15–17 years ------------------------ https://t.co/Hi2YYDh93R
Bodychecking experience and rates of injury among ice hockey players aged 15–17 years https://t.co/IlgE8nv52R
New🇨🇦research: @uofcknes study suggests more bodychecking experience does not protect against concussion in youth hockey players, and there are no unintended injury consequences of policies disallowing checking. Access the paper in @CMAJ: https://t.co/wS
Experience with body checking did NOT protect against injury & #concussion in youth #hockey: ➡️Higher rates of injury & concussion in players with more experience with body checking @HockeyCanada @NHL @PinkConcussions @concussionblog https://t.co/e
Interesting Article - is this a reflection of the 3 year age gap in U18 ? Bodychecking experience and rates of injury among ice hockey players aged 15–17 years https://t.co/p5uoZ9Xoe6
This @cmaj article raises a question: Should medical journals publish on hockey injuries? Although hockey is a fairly white sport, it is not very popular in Canada. (I am not calling for more articles about soccer injuries in medical journals) https://
Data on #injury in youth #hockey https://t.co/332tZ14BNI #concussion #TBI
Bodychecking experience and rates of injury among ice hockey players aged 15–17 years https://t.co/AOtUC4QlWS
Bodychecking experience does not lower risk of #injury for teen #hockeyplayers @CMAJ @CMAJ https://t.co/aWNva5B42d https://t.co/8B4VjaPPkQ