La Trobe sports injury researchers are working with the AFL, Medibank and other partners to reduce knee injury among female Australian football players, thanks to a grant from the ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC).
With more women tackling contact sports, including Australian football and soccer, the rate of knee injury among players is also on the rise. An estimated 5% of the 500,000 women playing Australian football are likely to sustain an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury each year.
La Trobe’s Sport and Exercise Medicine Research Centre researchers, led by Professor Kay Crossley, have secured an NHMRC Partnership grant to work with the AFL and other partners to the evaluate the effectiveness of Prep-to-Play, a La Trobe-developed program aimed at curbing injury.
Professor Crossley said sports such as Australian football – which involve pivoting, turning, jumping and landing – were growing rapidly, but proving risky to knees, particularly among young, active women.
“A woman who has had an ACL injury is four to six times more at risk of osteoarthritis than an uninjured woman,” said Professor Crossley, a clinical sports physiotherapist.
“A woman with an ACL injury is twice as likely to require a knee joint replacement later in life and is one-and-a-half times more likely to develop chronic cardiovascular disease. These longer-term injuries or diseases can have lasting affects one physical and mental health. They also put a burden on our healthcare system,” said Professor Crossley.
Professor Crossley worked with AFL coaches and players to create Prep-to-Play, which provides resources to help grassroots football coaches and female players enhance performance while reducing injury risk.
The NHMRC funding will enable Professor Crossley and her team to work with partners – the AFL, Medibank, the Australian Physiotherapy Association, the Australasian College of Sport and Exercise Physicians and Sports Medicine Australia – to evaluate Prep-to-Play’s uptake and effectiveness over two community football seasons (2021 and 2022) in Victoria.
Dr Linda Swan – Medibank’s Chief Medical Officer and executive lead of the Medibank Better Health Foundation – said research can be a catalyst for change in government policy and community practices. She said it’s up to coaches, parents and carers to ensure children and teenagers are warming up properly, to greatly reduce the risk of injury.
“A national injury prevention program like Prep-to-Play is science based and cost-effective for a club to implement. The education of coaches, players and parents is critical to ensure we do better in looking after the knees of our sporty young women,” Dr Swan said.
“Government health agencies and sporting bodies need to recognise the future health implications of ACL injuries for children and teenagers. We know women are worse off when it comes to ACL and other injuries than men in both AFL and soccer,” Dr Swan added.
La Trobe Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Research and Industry Engagement Professor Susan Dodds said the research funding is testament to the high-quality research La Trobe does in sport and exercise medicine.
“Preventing injuries from happening in the first instance is vital for the mental and physical welfare of our community and benefits our healthcare system. Providing a safer sporting environment will hopefully encourage more young women to participate in sports and exercise,” Professor Dodds said.
AFL Head of Women’s Football Nicole Livingstone agreed that player health and safety is paramount.
“The AFL will continue to support research and implement best-practice injury prevention programs across all levels of women’s football. The AFL Female Football Prep to Play Program has been a terrific resource for football communities from the grassroots to the elite to implement in their training programs and we will continue to work with La Trobe University to research ways in which we can decrease the incidence and prevalence of knee injuries in women’s football,” Ms Livingstone said.
About the grant
NHMRC Partnerships Projects help create partnerships among decision makers, policy makers, managers, clinicians, and researchers. This funding scheme provides funding and support to create new opportunities for researchers and policy makers to work together to define research questions and undertake research, and to interpret and implement the findings. Partnership Projects answer a specific research question to influence health and well-being through changes in the delivery, organisation, funding and access to health services.
CAPTION: A training session with Western Bulldogs AFLW player Gabby Newton.