Cardiovascular prevention and at-risk behaviours in a large population of amateur rugby players

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_FD5663337DE9
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Cardiovascular prevention and at-risk behaviours in a large population of amateur rugby players
Journal
Eur J Prev Cardiol
Author(s)
Chague F., Georges M., Gudjoncik A., Hermerel T., Garet G., Israel J., Hager J. P., Aviat P., Laurent Y., Gremeaux V., Cottin Y., Zeller M.
ISSN
2047-4881 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2047-4873
Publication state
Published
Issued date
09/2019
Volume
26
Number
14
Pages
1522-1530
Language
english
Notes
Chague, Frederic
Georges, Marjolaine
Gudjoncik, Aurelie
Hermerel, Thierry
Garet, Gilles
Israel, Jean
Hager, Jean-Philippe
Aviat, Patrick
Laurent, Yves
Gremeaux, Vincent
Cottin, Yves
Zeller, Marianne
eng
England
Eur J Prev Cardiol. 2019 Sep;26(14):1522-1530. doi: 10.1177/2047487319837066. Epub 2019 Mar 19.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIM: We aimed to investigate cardiovascular risk factors and health behaviours prospectively in a large population of French amateur rugby players. METHODS: An anonymous questionnaire was displayed to rugby players aged over 12 years enrolled in the 2014-2015 French amateur rugby championship from the Burgundy region (n = 5140). Questions addressed awareness on: (a) cardiovascular prevention; (b) tobacco, alcohol and highly caffeinated beverages consumption; and (c) adherence to prevention guidelines (ECG checks, training in basic life support, avoidance of sports practice during fever/infectious episodes). RESULTS: Among the 640 participants who completed the questionnaires, most were male (90%) and were aged under 35 years (80%). Almost half had basic life support training (42%), but only a minority attended an ECG check-up before licensing (37%), and only a few were aware of the cardiovascular prevention information campaign (17%), similarly across the age groups. Surprisingly, playing rugby with fever was commonly reported (44%) and was even more frequent in young women (55%). A high number of respondents were current smokers (35%), of whom most reported consumption less than 2 hours before/after a rugby session. Alcohol drinkers were frequent (69%), of whom most (79%) drank alcohol less than 2 hours before/after a match. Highly caffeinated beverages consumption (34%) was high, particularly in younger players (39%). Half highly caffeinated beverages consumption was in the setting of a rugby session, even greater in women and mainly motivated by performance enhancement (34%). CONCLUSION: Our findings from a representative regional cohort may help to identify targets for cardiovascular prevention through the development of educational programmes aiming to improve the knowledge and behaviour of amateur rugby players.
Keywords
Alcohol, amateur rugby player, at-risk behaviour, awareness, cardiovascular prevention, guidelines adhesion, highly caffeinated beverages, screening, survey, tobacco
Pubmed
Create date
26/11/2019 12:35
Last modification date
11/12/2019 7:26
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