Title :
Making Sports Safer for Kids: Using Biomechanical Devices to Prevent Injuries
Abstract :
Children seem so resilient. They can fall off a moving bike and get right up off the ground, seemingly no worse for the wear. They can leap off the side of a hill and land hard but run off with an ease that makes adults jealous. Nonetheless, kids can and do get hurt, and sometimes those injuries are difficult to spot. A growing number of research groups and companies are now turning their attention from professional and college athletes to schoolchildren aged 6-18 years to learn how to make sports as safe as possible. Researchers have developed a biomechanical surrogate that models a child´s response to impact observed in sports.
Keywords :
biomechanics; impact (mechanical); injuries; paediatrics; patient care; sport; biomechanical devices; biomechanical surrogate; children; fall off; impact response; injury prevention; moving bike; sports; Accelerometers; Biomechanics; Injuries; Pediatrics; Performance evaluation; Safety; Adolescent; Athletic Injuries; Biomechanical Phenomena; Biomedical Engineering; Brain Concussion; Child; Female; Head Protective Devices; Humans; Male; Sports Medicine;
Journal_Title :
Pulse, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MPUL.2013.2271684