Work-related acute injuries from mandatory fitness training in the Swedish Police Force

International Journal of Sports Medicine
M de Loës, B R Jansson

Abstract

Acute injuries in the Swedish Police Force from on-duty fitness training were selected retrospectively from the Information System of Occupational Injuries (ISA) at the National Board of Occupational Safety and Health and, if having caused a sick-leave exceeding 2 weeks, to the Labour Market Insurance (AMF Insurance). The latter included injuries from 1995 only. During the seven-year period 1992 to 1998, 920 injuries (80 % in males) from fitness training involving police officers were reported to the ISA-register. The total incidence was 1.6 for policemen per 10 000 hours of exposure and 2.2 for policewomen, which is 1.4 times higher than in men. Around 50 % of the injuries occurred in team and contact sports, with a slightly higher percentage for males, 54 % versus 49 % in females. The percentage of injuries from self-defense training was twice as high as in women than in men, 29 % versus 15 %. In 1995, 42 of the 72 injuries in males and 6 of the 21 injuries in females caused more than 14 days of sick-leave and were announced to the Occupational No Fault Liability Insurance. The major part, 32 of 48 injuries, came from team or contact sports (mainly floorball and soccer). Six policemen incurred injuries that were classified wi...Continue Reading

Citations

Feb 1, 2005·Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports·Magnus ForssbladSuzanne Werner
Jun 22, 2014·International Journal of Occupational Medicine and Environmental Health·Andrzej Soroka, Bogusław Sawicki
Jan 7, 2009·Scandinavian Journal of Public Health·Jenny KörlinPia Svedberg
Nov 22, 2008·World Journal of Surgery·Shin KobayashiTaira Kinoshita
Sep 1, 2006·PharmacoEconomics·Ebere AkobunduC Daniel Mullins
Nov 28, 2019·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Liana LentzDonald Voaklander

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