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Using opinion leaders to address intervention gaps in concussion prevention in youth sports: key concepts and foundational theory

Behavioral interventions to increase disclosure and proper management of concussion in youth sports have unrealized potential when it comes to preventing concussion. Interventions have focused on changing individual athlete behavior and have fallen short of the potential for sustained systemic behav...

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Autores principales: Kerr, Zachary Y., Register-Mihalik, Johna K., Haarbauer-Krupa, Juliet, Kroshus, Emily, Go, Vivian, Gildner, Paula, Byrd, K. Hunter, Marshall, Stephen W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6035905/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29984386
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40621-018-0158-7
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author Kerr, Zachary Y.
Register-Mihalik, Johna K.
Haarbauer-Krupa, Juliet
Kroshus, Emily
Go, Vivian
Gildner, Paula
Byrd, K. Hunter
Marshall, Stephen W.
author_facet Kerr, Zachary Y.
Register-Mihalik, Johna K.
Haarbauer-Krupa, Juliet
Kroshus, Emily
Go, Vivian
Gildner, Paula
Byrd, K. Hunter
Marshall, Stephen W.
author_sort Kerr, Zachary Y.
collection PubMed
description Behavioral interventions to increase disclosure and proper management of concussion in youth sports have unrealized potential when it comes to preventing concussion. Interventions have focused on changing individual athlete behavior and have fallen short of the potential for sustained systemic behavioral change. One potentially critical reason for this shortfall is that other key determinants of risk behaviors at all levels of the socio-ecological model (e.g. interpersonal, community, policy) are not addressed in extant programming. There is a critical need for theory-driven interventions that address concussion prevention and education at the community level and target sustainable culture change. The Popular Opinion Leader (POL) intervention, a multi-level intervention model previously successfully employed in multiple public health contexts, is theoretically well positioned to affect such change. POL is based on the Diffusion of Innovations framework and involves identifying, recruiting, and training well-respected and trusted individuals to personally endorse prevention and risk-reduction within their social networks. Critical behavioral changes related to concussion disclosure and management have been shown to diffuse to others if enough opinion leaders endorse and support the behaviors. This article summarizes the concepts and principles of POL and describes how it could be adapted for and implemented in youth sport settings. For optimal impact, POL needs to adapt to several factors unique to youth sports settings and culture. First, adult involvement may be important, given their direct involvement in the athlete’s medical care. However, parents and coaches’ opinions on injury care-seeking, competition, and safety may affect their perceptions of POL. Second, youth sports are structured settings both physically and socioculturally. Games and practices may provide opportunities for the informal interactions that are critical to the success of POL. However, youth sport setting membership is transient as players get older and move to other sport settings; POL approaches need to be self-sustaining despite this turnover. Moreover, stakeholder value placed on athlete development and competition, alongside safety, must be considered. Formative research is needed to ensure that POL principles are translated into the youth sport setting while maintaining fidelity to the concepts and principles that have made POL successful for other health outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-60359052018-07-30 Using opinion leaders to address intervention gaps in concussion prevention in youth sports: key concepts and foundational theory Kerr, Zachary Y. Register-Mihalik, Johna K. Haarbauer-Krupa, Juliet Kroshus, Emily Go, Vivian Gildner, Paula Byrd, K. Hunter Marshall, Stephen W. Inj Epidemiol Commentary Behavioral interventions to increase disclosure and proper management of concussion in youth sports have unrealized potential when it comes to preventing concussion. Interventions have focused on changing individual athlete behavior and have fallen short of the potential for sustained systemic behavioral change. One potentially critical reason for this shortfall is that other key determinants of risk behaviors at all levels of the socio-ecological model (e.g. interpersonal, community, policy) are not addressed in extant programming. There is a critical need for theory-driven interventions that address concussion prevention and education at the community level and target sustainable culture change. The Popular Opinion Leader (POL) intervention, a multi-level intervention model previously successfully employed in multiple public health contexts, is theoretically well positioned to affect such change. POL is based on the Diffusion of Innovations framework and involves identifying, recruiting, and training well-respected and trusted individuals to personally endorse prevention and risk-reduction within their social networks. Critical behavioral changes related to concussion disclosure and management have been shown to diffuse to others if enough opinion leaders endorse and support the behaviors. This article summarizes the concepts and principles of POL and describes how it could be adapted for and implemented in youth sport settings. For optimal impact, POL needs to adapt to several factors unique to youth sports settings and culture. First, adult involvement may be important, given their direct involvement in the athlete’s medical care. However, parents and coaches’ opinions on injury care-seeking, competition, and safety may affect their perceptions of POL. Second, youth sports are structured settings both physically and socioculturally. Games and practices may provide opportunities for the informal interactions that are critical to the success of POL. However, youth sport setting membership is transient as players get older and move to other sport settings; POL approaches need to be self-sustaining despite this turnover. Moreover, stakeholder value placed on athlete development and competition, alongside safety, must be considered. Formative research is needed to ensure that POL principles are translated into the youth sport setting while maintaining fidelity to the concepts and principles that have made POL successful for other health outcomes. Springer International Publishing 2018-07-09 /pmc/articles/PMC6035905/ /pubmed/29984386 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40621-018-0158-7 Text en © The Author(s). 2018 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
spellingShingle Commentary
Kerr, Zachary Y.
Register-Mihalik, Johna K.
Haarbauer-Krupa, Juliet
Kroshus, Emily
Go, Vivian
Gildner, Paula
Byrd, K. Hunter
Marshall, Stephen W.
Using opinion leaders to address intervention gaps in concussion prevention in youth sports: key concepts and foundational theory
title Using opinion leaders to address intervention gaps in concussion prevention in youth sports: key concepts and foundational theory
title_full Using opinion leaders to address intervention gaps in concussion prevention in youth sports: key concepts and foundational theory
title_fullStr Using opinion leaders to address intervention gaps in concussion prevention in youth sports: key concepts and foundational theory
title_full_unstemmed Using opinion leaders to address intervention gaps in concussion prevention in youth sports: key concepts and foundational theory
title_short Using opinion leaders to address intervention gaps in concussion prevention in youth sports: key concepts and foundational theory
title_sort using opinion leaders to address intervention gaps in concussion prevention in youth sports: key concepts and foundational theory
topic Commentary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6035905/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29984386
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40621-018-0158-7
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