IOC WORLD CONFERENCE PREVENTION OF INJURY & ILLNESS IN SPORT © CIO - Richard Juilliart © CIO - Richard

MONACO 16 -18 MARCH 2017 Final Programme

IN COLLABORATION WITH ORGANISED BY WITH THE SUPPORT OF

Table of Contents

IOC World Conference on Prevention of Injury & Illness in Sport Monaco, 16-18 March 2017

Foreword by H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco 4

Foreword by the IOC President, Thomas Bach 5

Committees 6

The Worldwide Olympic Partners 8

Conference Venue 9

Grimaldi Forum Floor Plan 10

Meeting Rooms 11

Programme at a Glance 12

Scientifi c Programme 15

Thematic Posters 62

Workshops 86

List of Speakers 92

Patronage 98

Scientifi c Information 100

General Information 102

Social Media Guidelines 103

Social Events 106

Exhibitors 107 Foreword by H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco

I am thrilled that the principality will host once again the “IOC World Conference on Prevention of injury and Illness in Sport” from 16 to 18 March 2017. My sincere thanks to the organizers who have taken the decision to come back to Monaco after the 2011 and 2014 editions.

Injury and illness represents for any athlete periods of doubt and decline during which he cannot achieve his ultimate goal of performing and enhancing his performance. The protection and preservation of their physical integrity are priorities for the Olympic Movement and all National Olympic Committees.

I would like to include new challenges linked to environmental issues such as harmful air quality, water pollution, the prevalence of the athletes whether at a competition level or for the practice of leisure sport. As Chair of the Sustainability and Legacy Commission, I can affi rm that the International Olympic Committee is engaged proactively on multiple fronts to address these problems.

The works of this Conference has proved its effi ciency in defi ning new clinical protocols and providing an invaluable platform of information dedicated to the athlete’s wellness.

The program of the upcoming edition and the quality of the speakers are in line with the high expectations that can be anticipated from a gathering of such eminent professionals.

I would like to wish all the participants a highly engaging and successful Conference.

H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco

4 Foreword by the IOC President, Thomas Bach

As an Olympian I know how much the worry of injury and illness can be a part of every-day life for an athlete. It can be just as much of a concern as a false start in the 100m, or a failed parry in fencing.

As a former athlete, I know how much this apprehension is an intrinsic part of a sporting career.

When we push ourselves to the limit of our capabilities health risks are inherent to the practice of sport. This is why protecting athletes’ health and preventing injuries and illnesses in training and competition are top priorities for the International Olympic Committee. Our Medical and Scientifi c Commission, chaired by Professor Uğur Erdener, is working hard to help minimise the risk of injury and illness in sport.

In keeping with this framework, the 5th IOC World Conference on Prevention of Injury and Illness will bring together eminent international specialists to collaborate and share their latest fi ndings and knowledge on how to best protect the athletes’ health, in and out of competition.

Dealing with injury and illness is not an end in itself. All this work is to help athletes perform at the height of their powers. It is all about how best to provide the ideal conditions to allow athletes to concentrate on giving their best.

After welcoming two successful editions in 2011 and 2014, Monaco will host this 2017 Conference.

May I sincerely thank our hosts, my IOC colleague H.S.H. Prince Albert II and the whole Principality of Monaco – a constant friend of Olympic sport.

My thanks go also to our partners and all the contributing authors and speakers for their support for and involvement in the Conference.

Through this Conference, our ultimate objective will always not just to reduce the risk of injuries and illness in sport – but to work to avoid them entirely.

With Olympic Agenda 2020, we have demonstrated how strongly we are committed to putting the athletes at the heart of the Olympic Movement. This conference is another step in that goal.

Thomas Bach

5 Organising Committee

President Lars ENGEBRETSEN, MD, PhD Professor & Head of Medicine & Science International Olympic Committee, Lausanne, Switzerland; Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center, Oslo University Hospital & Norwegian Olympic Training Center, Oslo, Norway

Members Cherine TOUVET - FAHMY, Anti-Doping & Project Manager IOC Medical & Scientifi c Department, Head of Logistics, Social Events

Organising Partner, Publi Créations SAM: Benedetta BOARETTO - SARTORI, Account Manager Denise DAVIDE, Project Manager

International Olympic Committee

Medical & Scientifi c Department

Director in charge: Richard BUDGETT, MD, OBE

IOC Medical & Scientifi c Commission Chair: Uğur ERDENER, Professor, Dr

Monaco Olympic Committee

General Secretary H.E. Mrs. Yvette LAMBIN-BERTI

Organising Partner

74, Boulevard d’Italie - MC - 98000 Monaco - Tel.: +377 97 97 35 55 - Fax: +377 97 97 35 50 www.publicreations.com - E-mail: [email protected]

6 Scientifi c Committee Chair Roald BAHR, MD, PhD Professor Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center & Norwegian Olympic Training Center, Oslo, Norway & Aspetar Orthopaedic & Sports, Medicine Hospital, Doha, Qatar Members Jonathan DREZNER, MD Willem MEEUWISSE, MD, PhD Professor, Department of Family Medicine Professor, UofC Sport Medicine Centre and Director, Center for Sports Cardiology Co-Chair, Sport Injury Prevention Research Centre, Team Physician, Seattle Seahawks and UW Huskies Faculty of Kinesiology, University of Calgary University of Washington, Seattle, USA 2500 University Dr. NW Jiri DVORAK, MD Calgary, Alberta T2N 1N4 Professor of Neurology, Schulthess Clinic Zurich, Margo Lynn MOUNTJOY, MD, PhD, CCFP, FCFP, FACSM, Dept of Neurology, Swiss Concussion center, Switzerland Dip Sport Med. Lars ENGEBRETSEN, MD PhD, Associate Clinical Professor, McMaster University of School Professor & Head of Medicine & Science of Medicine, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; IOC Medical International Olympic Committee, Lausanne, Switzerland; Commission-Games Group; FINA Bureau - Sports Medicine Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center, Oslo University Hospital & Norwegian Olympic Training Center, Oslo, Norway Erich MÜLLER, PhD Professor Department of Sport Science Caroline FINCH, PhD Professor Vice Rector for Teaching Robert HT Smith Personal Chair in Sports Injury Prevention University of Salzburg, NHMRC Principal Research Fellow Salzburg, Austria Director, Australian Centre for Research into Injury in Sport and its Prevention Takeshi MUNETA, MD PhD Professor School of Health Sciences Department of Joint Surgery and Sports Medicine Federation University Australia Graduate School of Medical Science, Tokyo Medical and Dental Fares S HADDAD, MD FRCS (Orth) FFSEM Professor University Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon, Chief of Knee and Sports Medicine Professor of Orthopaedic and Sports Surgery Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Tokyo Medical and Dental University College London Hospitals, HCA Hospitals University Hospital Divisional Clinical Director of Surgery UCLH Antonio PELLICCIA, MD, Professor Director, Institute of Sport, Exercise and Health, UCLH and University College London Institute of Sports Medicine and Science Associate Director Education, UCLP Largo Piero Gabrielli, 1 Programme Director, UCH Rotation Rome, 00197 – Italy Per HÖLMICH, MD, DMSc, Professor Yorck Olaf SCHUMACHER, Dr. med. Head of Research, Consultant Aspetar Orthopaedic & Sports Medicine Hospital, Doha, Qatar IOC Research Centre Copenhagen Martin SCHWELLNUS, MBBCh, MSc (Med), MD, Sports Orthopedic Research Center - Copenhagen (SORC-C) FACSM, FFIMS, Professor Arthroscopic Center, Department of Orthopedic Surgery Professor of Sport and Exercise Medicine Copenhagen University Hospital, Amager-Hvidovre, Denmark Sports Groin Pain Center, Aspetar Orthopaedic Director: Institute for Sport, Exercise Medicine and Lifestyle Research and Sports Medicine Hospital, Doha, Qatar Faculty of Health Sciences University of Pretoria, South Africa Karim KHAN, MD, PhD, MBA, Professor Director: IOC Research Centre University of British Columbia, Director: FIFA Medical Centre of Excellence Vancouver, Canada & Editor in Chief, BJSM Evert VERHAGEN, PhD Amsterdam Collaboration on Health & Safety in Sports Michael KJÆR, MD DMSci Professor Institute of Sports Medicine, Bispebjerg Hospital Dept of Public and Occupational Health University of Copenhagen, Denmark VU University Medical Center IOC Research Centre Copenhagen van der Boechorststraat 7 1081BT, Amsterdam, Netherlands Sae Yong LEE, PhD, ATC, Professor Associate Professor, Department of Physical Education Markus WALDEN, MD PhD Department Chair Orthopaedic Surgeon & Senior Researcher Co-Director of Yonsei Institute of Sports Science and Exercise Medicine Department of Orthopaedics, (YISSEM) Hässleholm-Kristianstad-Ystad Hospitals, Hässleholm Director of Graduate Sports Medicine and Athletic Training Program & Division of Community Medicine, Co-Director of Integrative Sports Science Laboratory Department of Medical and Health Sciences, Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea Linköping University, Linköping,

7

Conference Venue

GRIMALDI FORUM 22, Avenue Princesse Grace, 98000 Monaco - Phone number: +377 99 99 20 20

With 35,000 sqm. of modular premises and state-of-the-art technologies, the Grimaldi Forum Monaco is a wonderful tool to buildup events. Since its opening in 2000, about 100 events are organised each year. Many events management and international corporate companies are attracted by the glass and steel structure as well as its tailor-made services dedicated to the 3 auditoria, 22 breakout rooms, 2 interconnecting ehibitions halls and 2 banqueting areas.

A permanent team of 150 professionals, representing 46 different professions, accompanies event organisers in their projects, from the spaces-layout design to the construction of settings, as well as for logistics, catering, hospitality, communications, etc. The Grimaldi Forum Monaco can host all types of professional events: conventions, seminars, product launches, exhibitions, fairs, congresses.

Ideally located in the heart of Monaco, the Grimaldi Forum Monaco is situated within walking distance of hotels, restaurants and other leisure activities.

The Grimaldi Forum Monaco is one of the fi rst congress centres in Europe to have successfully obtained the ISO 14001: 2004 international standard in environmental management.

The staff and visitors are actively encouraged to follow its «Act Green» policy. Furthermore a «Green Event» offer is available and proposes tailor-made solutions for events’ wishing to limit their environmental footprint. For more information, please visit their website www.grimaldiforum.mc

9 Grimaldi Forum Floor Plan Blanc Camille Prince Pierre Apollinaire Diaghilev Speakers' Speakers' Preview Room Preview Hall Auric Van Dongen Van Lunch Area Foyer -2 Coffee breaks Scotto Exhibition Hall Poulenc 2 Poulenc Bosio 1 Poulenc 1 Poulenc Bosio 2 Esplanade Poster Area Poster Pagnol Lifar Colette 3 + Genevoix 1 Geraldy Genevoix 2

10 Meeting Rooms C E Information Desk / Simultaneous translation AMILLE BLAN PRINCE PIERRE PRINCE PIERR CAMILLE BLANC C Room Genevoix 2+3 Room Bosio 1 Room Bosio 2

APOLLINAIRE 63($.(56· PREVIEWROOM Session I Session J Session K Room Poulenc 1 Room Lifar Room Genevoix 1 Room Scotto Session F Session G Session H Session E WORKSHOPS

BOSIO1

BOSIO2 POULENC2

POULENC1

COLETTE Symposia Keynotes / Head-to-Head Debates Symposia Free communications - - - Symposia

3 - +

GENEVOIX 1

GENEVOIX 2 Room Prince Pierre Room Auric Dongen Room Van Room Camille Blanc Session A Session B Session C Session D

11 Programme at a Glance

Wednesday 15 March

16.00 Opening of the registrations 18.30 OPENING CEREMONY 19.00 Welcome reception

Thursday 16 March

08.00 Registrations 09.00 OPENING OF THE SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS Room Prince Pierre 09.30 KEYNOTE 1 Room Prince Pierre Speaker: Willem Van Mechelen (The Netherlands) 25 years after: The sequence of prevention revisited

10.30-11.00 Coffee Break SESSION A SESSION B SESSION D WORKSHOP Room Prince Pierre Room Camille Blanc Room Van Dongen SESSIONS 11.00-12.30 11.00-12.30 11.00-12.30 11.30-12.30 Symposium 1 Symposium 2 Free communications SESSION E Room Scotto Chairs: Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar) Chair: Lars Engebretsen Chairs: Antonio Pelliccia (Italy), SESSION F Room Poulenc 1 Jonathan Drezner (USA) Kristian Thorborg (Denmark) (Norway/Switzerland) SESSION G Room Lifar Cardiology & Mass events Hamstring injury prevention How to prevent secondary SESSION H Room Genevoix 1 that works! meniscal injuries after SESSION I Room Genevoix 2+3 From basic mechanisms to acl injury in our youngest international implementation athletes; the skeletally SESSION J Room Bosio 1 immature? SESSION K Room Bosio 2 12.30-14.00 Lunch SESSION A SESSION B SESSION D WORKSHOP Room Prince Pierre Room Camille Blanc Room Van Dongen SESSIONS 14.00-15.00 14.00-15.00 14.00-16.00 14.00-16.00 Head-to-Head debate 1 Symposium 3 Free communications SESSION E Room Scotto Chair: Karim Khan (Canada) Chair: Erich Müller (Austria) Chairs: Margo Mountjoy (Canada), SESSION F Room Poulenc 1 Lars Engebretsen (Norway/Switzerland) Assessing where we are at Equipment designed SESSION G Room Lifar after 20 years of research to reduce risk of injuries Surveillance & Youth SESSION H Room Genevoix 1 in sports injury prevention in elite alpine skiing SESSION I Room Genevoix 2+3 15.00-16.00 15.00-16.00 SESSION J Room Bosio 1 Symposium 4 Symposium 5 SESSION K Room Bosio 2 Chairs: Takeshi Muneta (Japan) Chair: Caroline Finch (Australia) Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar) Citius, altius, fortius – Sports-specifi c acl injury ensuring sports safety mechanisms and messages have it implication for prevention maximal impact

16.00-16.30 Coffee Break SESSION A SESSION B SESSION C WORKSHOP Room Prince Pierre Room Camille Blanc Room Auric SESSIONS 16.30-17.30 16.30-17.30 16.30-17.30 16.30-18.30 Symposium 6 Symposium 7 Symposium 8 SESSION E Room Scotto Chair: Eva Ageberg (Sweden) Chair: Grethe Myklebust (Norway) Chair: Sebastien Racinais (Qatar) SESSION F Room Poulenc 1 The brain’s role in ACL injury Team handball - Protecting the health and SESSION G Room Lifar prevention time to reduce the injuries! performance of the traveling athlete SESSION H Room Genevoix 1 17.30-18.30 17.30-18.30 17.30-18.30 SESSION I Room Genevoix 2+3 Symposium 9 Symposium 10 Symposium 11 SESSION J Room Bosio 1 Chair: Jill Cook (Australia) Chair: Robin Mitchell (Fiji) Chair: Evert Verhagen SESSION K Room Bosio 2 Tendon pain: how to direct Postcard from the third (The Netherlands) prevention strategies by world – prevention of illness Tweeting, liking, following, understanding the local and and injury in athletes from sharing: enhancing the central contributions developing countries protection of athletes’ health now and in the future

12 Programme at a Glance

Friday 17 March

08.30-09.15 KEYNOTE 2 Room Prince Pierre Speaker: Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar) Why screening to predict injury does not work – and probably never will…

SESSION A SESSION B SESSION C SESSION D WORKSHOP Room Prince Pierre Room Camille Blanc Room Auric Room Van Dongen SESSIONS 09.30-11.00 09.30-11.00 09.30-11.00 09.30-10.50 09.30-10.30 Symposium 12 Symposium 13 Symposium 14 Free communications SESSION E Room Scotto Chair: Johannes Zwerver Chair: Carolyn Emery (Canada) Chairs: Erich Müller (Austria) Chairs: Karim Khan (Canada) SESSION F Room Poulenc 1 Caroline Finch (Australia) (The Netherlands) Injury prevention in youth Torbjørn Soligard (Norway/ SESSION G Room Lifar Switzerland) Intervention Studies I Prevention of tendinopathy; sport: time to “get on with it!” SESSION H Room Genevoix 1 how to play the game? Go big or go home: is injury SESSION I Room Genevoix 2+3 prevention among competitive and recreational snowboarders and SESSION J Room Bosio 1 freestyle skiers possible? SESSION K Room Bosio 2 11.00-11.30 Coffee Break SESSION A SESSION B SESSION D WORKSHOP Room Prince Pierre Room Camille Blanc Room Van Dongen SESSIONS 11.30-13.00 11.30-13.00 11.30-12.50 11.30-12.30 Symposium 15 Symposium 16 Free communications SESSION E Room Scotto Chair: Tron Krosshaug (Norway) Chair: Erich Müller (Austria) Chairs: SESSION F Room Poulenc 1 Yorck Olaf Schumacher (Qatar), ACL injury prevention works Equipment designed Sae Yong Lee (South Korea) SESSION G Room Lifar – but not in the real world? to reduce risk of injuries SESSION H Room Genevoix 1 in elite alpine skiing Risk factors & Load SESSION I Room Genevoix 2+3 SESSION J Room Bosio 1 SESSION K Room Bosio 2

13.00-14.30 Lunch 14.30-15.15 KEYNOTE 3 Room Prince Pierre Speaker: Cindy J. Chang (USA) Translating research into action: How to minimize risk in Olympic athletes? 15.30-16.30 THEMATIC POSTERS SESSION Exhibition hall – Poster Area

16.30-17.00 Coffee Break SESSION A SESSION B SESSION C SESSION D WORKSHOP Room Prince Pierre Room Camille Blanc Room Auric Room Van Dongen SESSIONS 17.00-18.00 17.00-18.00 17.00-18.00 17.00-18.50 17.00-18.00 Symposium 17 Symposium 18 Symposium 19 Free communications SESSION E Room Scotto Chairs: Per Hölmich (Denmark/ Chair: Margo Mountjoy (Canada) Chair: Ian Shrier (Canada) Chairs: Erich Müller (Austria), SESSION F Room Poulenc 1 Takeshi Muneta (Japan) Qatar) Game over: time to blow the Optimizing your injury SESSION G Room Lifar Thor Einar Andersen (Norway) whistle on psychological surveillance system: Biomechanics & External SESSION I Room Genevoix 2+3 Preventing groin injuries in injury in sport strategies to maximize Risk Factors SESSION J Room Bosio 1 football – beyond the prevention "time-loss" approach SESSION K Room Bosio 2

18.00-19.00 18.00-19.00 18.00-19.00 18.00-19.00 Head-to-Head debate 2 Symposium 20 Symposium 21 SESSION E Room Scotto Chair: Ian Shrier (Canada) Chairs: Alex Donaldson (Australia) Chair: Ian Needleman SESSION F Room Poulenc 1 Mario Bizzini (Switzerland) (United Kingdom) Enough is enough – or is SESSION H Room Genevoix 1 it? Can we stop conducting Leadership: a vital Bodies of gods, teeth of SESSION I Room Genevoix 2+3 RCTs and accept we ingredient in the recipe yobs - preventing poor oral SESSION J Room Bosio 1 have enough evidence to for implementing health health in sport fully inform sports injury protection and injury SESSION K Room Bosio 2 prevention? prevention interventions in sport

20.00 SPORTS CELEBRATION NIGHT

13 Programme at a Glance

Saturday 18 March

08.30-09.15 KEYNOTE 4 Room Prince Pierre Speaker: Tim Gabbett (Australia) Monitoring training load in team sports: Should athletes be training smarter and harder? The training-injury prevention paradox

SESSION A SESSION B SESSION C SESSION D WORKSHOP Room Prince Pierre Room Camille Blanc Room Auric Room Van Dongen SESSIONS 09.30-11.00 09.30-11.00 09.30-11.00 09.30-10.50 09.30-10.30 Symposium 22 Symposium 23 Symposium 24 Free communications SESSION E Room Scotto Chair: Grethe Myklebust (Norway) Chair: Jonathan Drezner (USA) Chairs: Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar) Chairs: Evert Verhagen SESSION F Room Poulenc 1 Michael F. Bergeron (USA) (The Netherlands), How to prevent the painful Screening to prevent sudden Martin Schwellnus (South Africa) SESSION G Room Lifar shoulder among the cardiac death: evidence, Overload in the elite youth athlete: SESSION H Room Genevoix 1 overhead athletes knowledge gaps, and new Challenges and solutions Intervention Studies II SESSION I Room Genevoix 2+3 directions SESSION J Room Bosio 1 SESSION K Room Bosio 2 11.00-11.30 Coffee Break 11.30-13.00 11.30-13.00 11.30-13.00 11.30-13.00 11.30-12.30 Symposium 25 Symposium 26 Symposium 27 Free communications SESSION E Room Scotto Chairs: Martin Hägglund (Sweden) Chairs: Stephen Targett (Qatar) Chair: Carolyn Emery (Canada) Chairs: Jiri Dvorak (Switzerland), SESSION F Room Poulenc 1 Caroline Finch (Australia) Håvard Moksnes (Norway) Per Hölmich (Denmark / Qatar) Concussion prevention in SESSION G Room Lifar From the research lab to the Preventing illness and injury child and adolescent sport: Hamstrings & 11 + SESSION H Room Genevoix 1 sporting pitch - effi cacy to in athletes – is the periodic are our children’s brains SESSION I Room Genevoix 2+3 effectiveness of preventive health examination (phe) a different? interventions in team sports valuable tool? SESSION J Room Bosio 1 SESSION K Room Bosio 2

13.00-14.30 Lunch SESSION A SESSION B SESSION C SESSION D WORKSHOP Room Prince Pierre Room Camille Blanc Room Auric Room Van Dongen SESSIONS 14.30-15.30 14.30-15.30 14.30-15.30 14.30-16.00 14.30-15.30 Symposium 28 Symposium 29 Symposium 30 Free communications SESSION E Room Scotto Chair: Caroline Finch (Australia) Chair: Michael Turner Chair: Julien Périard (Qatar) Chairs: Markus Waldén (Sweden) SESSION F Room Poulenc 1 Sae Yong Lee (South Korea) Preventing football injuries: (United Kingdom) Preventing exertional heat SESSION G Room Lifar Innovative approaches As the vicar said to the illness in youth, paralympic Video Analyses SESSION I Room Genevoix 2+3 for getting the most from actress - "anyone for and elite olympic athletes SESSION J Room Bosio 1 prospective injury data tennis?". The impact of intense training on the adolescent, overhead athlete

15.30-16.30 15.30-16.30 15.30-16.30 15.30-16.30 Symposium 31 Symposium 32 Symposium 33 SESSION E Room Scotto Chair: Wayne Derman Chair: Evert Verhagen Chair: Mark Fulcher SESSION F Room Poulenc 1 (South Africa) (The Netherlands) (New Zealand) SESSION G Room Lifar Evidence-based injury Proactive versus reactive: Implementing a national SESSION H Room Genevoix 1 prevention in paralympic Monitoring athletes’ health to injury prevention SESSION I Room Genevoix 2+3 sport optimise sport performance programme through prevention SESSION K Room Bosio 2

16.30-17.00 Coffee Break 17.00-17.45 KEYNOTE 5 Room Prince Pierre Speaker: Jonathan Drezner (USA) Preventing sudden cardiac death: the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly 17.45-18.15 CLOSING CEREMONY Room Prince Pierre

20.00 FACULTY DINNER (by invitation)

14 Scientifi c Programme

Wednesday 15 March 16.00 Opening of the registrations 18.30 OPENING CEREMONY Room Prince Pierre Greetings on behalf of the Organising Committee Lars Engebretsen Opening remarks by the Director of IOC Medical & Scientifi c Department Richard Budgett Video message by the IOC President Thomas Bach Welcome Speech H.S.H. Prince Albert II 19.00 Welcome Reception hosted by the Minister of State of the Principality of Monaco Thursday 16 March 08.00 Registrations 09.00-09.30 OPENING OF THE SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS Room Prince Pierre 09.30-10.30 Keynote 1 25 YEARS AFTER: THE SEQUENCE OF PREVENTION REVISITED Room Prince Pierre Speaker: Willem VAN MECHELEN (The Netherlands)

10.30-11.00 Coffee Break

11.00-12.30 Session A Symposium 1 Room Prince Pierre

HAMSTRING INJURY PREVENTION THAT WORKS! FROM BASIC MECHANISMS TO INTERNATIONAL IMPLEMENTATION Chairs: Roald BAHR (Norway/Qatar) & Kristian THORBORG (Denmark) 11.00-11.10 ❙ Back to the Future - Summing up 20 years of Scandinavian hamstring injury prevention research Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar) 11.10-11.25 ❙ Neuromuscular and muscle architectural defi cits related to hamstring injury and prevention David Opar (Australia) 11.25-11.40 ❙ Screening for different hamstring muscle strength characteristics - The Aspetar experience Nicol van Dyk (South Africa) 11.40-11.50 ❙ High-speed running load and related hamstring injury risk Anthony Shield (Australia) 11.50-12.05 ❙ Optimizing return-to-play and minimizing recurrence rate – The roles of clinical examination, imaging, rehabilitation and injections Gustaaf Reurink (The Netherlands) 12.05-12.15 ❙ Implementation issues in hamstring injury prevention – challenges and opportunities Kristian Thorborg (Denmark) 12.15-12.30 ❙ Panel discussion: Future directions for hamstring injury prevention and implementation Bahr, Opar, van Dyk, Shield, Reurink, Thorborg

15 Scientifi c Programme

11.00-12.30 Session B Symposium 2 Room Camille Blanc

HOW TO PREVENT SECONDARY MENISCAL INJURIES AFTER ACL INJURY IN OUR YOUNGEST ATHLETES; THE SKELETALLY IMMATURE? Chair: Lars ENGEBRETSEN (Norway/Switzerland)

11.00-11.10 ❙ Meniscal injury after ACL rupture in skeletally immature children - What is the problem and what do we do to prevent it? Guri Ekås (Norway) 11.10-11.20 ❙ Surgical reconstruction of the paediatric ACL - An intervention of prevention? Roman Seil (Luxembourg) 11.20-11.35 ❙ Active rehabilitation without surgery - Can training prevent secondary meniscus injuries? Håvard Moksnes (Norway) 11.35-11.50 ❙ Return to sport - A factor of consideration in the prevention of secondary meniscal injuries? - Criteria for return to sport to help prevent secondary meniscal injuries Hege Grindem (Norway) 11.50-12.00 ❙ What about the contralateral knee - How to prevent it from injury? Kristian Samuelsson (Sweden) 12.00-12.15 ❙ The still unresolved - Future directions for ACL related secondary meniscal injury prevention in children and youth. - Presentation of PAMI, the Paediatric ACL monitoring Initiative - A pan-European registry Roman Seil (Luxembourg) 12.15-12.30 ❙ Discussion

16 Thursday 16 March Scientifi c Programme

11.00-12.30 Session D Free communications Room Van Dongen

CARDIOLOGY & MASS EVENTS Chairs: Antonio PELLICCIA (Italy), Jonathan DREZNER (USA)

11.00-11.10 ❙ Cardiovascular incidents, including sudden cardiac arrests, in professional male football players with negative pre-participating cardiac screening results: an 8-yr follow-up study #516 Hilde Moseby Berge, Thor Einar Andersen (Norway), Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar) 11.10-11.20 ❙ Presence of abnormal fi ndings within sports pre-participation cardiovascular screening #827 João Freitas, Renato Andrade, Rogério Pereira, Ana Leal, Cátia Saavedra, Nuno Pais, Diana Marques, Isabel Lopes, Nuno Loureiro, Paulo Maia, Ovídio Costa, João Espregueira-Mendes (Portugal) 11.20-11.30 ❙ The Psychological Impact of Electrocardiogram Screening in National Collegiate Athletic Association Athletes #734 Irfan Asif, Scott Annett, Alex Ewing, Ramy Abdelfattah, Justin Rothmier, Kimberly Harmon, Jonathan Drezner (USA) 11.30-11.40 ❙ The protective effects of various warm-up modalities on exercise-induced bronchospasm (EIB) in non-asthmatic athletes #767 Jae Seung Chang, Young Hee Lee, In Deok Kong (South Korea) 11.40-11.50 ❙ Exercise Associated Hyponatremia (EAH) and Fluid Intake During the 2016 London Marathon #657 Steven Whatmough, Stephen Mears, Courtney Kipps (United Kingdom) 11.50-12.00 ❙ The Incidence of Exertional Heat Stroke during Mass-Participation Triathlon Races: Optimising Athlete Safety #805 Nicholas Knight, James Parkin, Ralph Smith, Courtney Kipps (United Kingdom) 12.00-12.10 ❙ Novel risk factors associated with more severe Exercise Associated Muscle Cramping (EAMC): A prospective cohort study of 41 698 distance runners #782 Sonja Swanevelder, Martin Schwellnus, Esme Jordaan (South Africa) 12.10-12.20 ❙ Injuries and illness during mass-participation triathlon races: Optimising competitor safety #713 Courtney Kipps, Ralph Smith, Nick Knight, James Parkin (United Kingdom) 12.20-12.30 ❙ The incidence of illness decreases over a 6-year period during the Super Rugby tournaments: A prospective cohort study involving 96 959 player days #786 Martin Schwellnus, Audrey Jansen van Rensburg, Dina Christina Janse van Rensburg, Charl Janse van Rensburg, Esme Jordaan, Wayne Derman, Clint Readhead (South Africa)

Thursday 16 March 17 Scientifi c Programme

11.30-12.30 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ Getting athletes and coaches to adhere to our preventive advices - #35 Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands), Carly McKay (United Kingdom)

Session F Room Poulenc 1 ❙ What is "(de)hydration" and how can we best monitor it? - #97 Tamara Hew-Butler (USA), Joseph Verbalis (USA)

Session G Room Lifar ❙ Predicting the Future: The Development of the WTA Tennis Specifi c Screen - #120 Belinda Smith (Australia), Jodie Dakic (Australia)

Session H Room Genevoix 1 ❙ Reducing the Risk of Concussions in Young Athletes by Implementing Evidence-Based Principles: What Is the Winning Blueprint? - #514 Brooke de Lench (USA), James MacDonald (USA)

Session I Room Genevoix 2+3 ❙ How to spot snake oil and snake oil salesmen: combining evidence and practice to make a quality decision on injury prevention - #470 Clare Ardern (Sweden/Australia), Alan McCall (United Kingdom)

Session J Room Bosio 1 ❙ Preventing Back Pain in Gymnasts - #250 Emily Stuart (USA)

Session K Room Bosio 2 ❙ Using a novel tennis stroke effi ciency rating to determine performance and injury risk: Is it how you hit a ball, or how much? - #263 Neeru Jayanthi (USA), Marc Kovacs (USA)

12.30-14.00 Lunch

18 Thursday 16 March Scientifi c Programme

14.00-15.00 Session A Head-to-Head debate 1 Room Prince Pierre

ASSESSING WHERE WE ARE AT AFTER 20 YEARS OF RESEARCH IN SPORTS INJURY PREVENTION Chair: Karim KHAN (Canada) 14.00-14.15 ❙ 20 years of research on sports injury prevention has left us empty handed; we have asked the wrong questions and employed inferior study designs Erik Witvrouw (Belgium) 14.15-14.30 ❙ 20 years of research on sports injury prevention has delivered a rich harvest with clinical benefi t and provides the foundation for an acceleration of advances Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands) 14.30-14.45 ❙ Discussion

14.00-15.00 Session B Symposium 3 Room Camille Blanc

EQUIPMENT DESIGNED TO REDUCE RISK OF INJURIES IN ELITE ALPINE SKIING Chair: Erich MÜLLER (Austria) 14.00-14.06 ❙ Epidemiology and causes of alpine skiing injuries Part 1 – 2006 to 2012 Sophie Steenstrup (Norway) 14.06-14.18 ❙ Equipment designed to reduce risk of impact injuries in alpine ski racing Matthias Gilgien (Norway/Switzerland) 14.18-14.30 ❙ Equipment designed to reduce risk of severe knee injuries in giant slalom skiing Josef Kröll (Austria) 14.30-14.42 ❙ Equipment designed to reduce risk of overuse injuries of the back in alpine ski racing Jörg Spörri (Austria) 14.42-14.48 ❙ Epidemiology and causes of alpine skiing injuries Part 2 – after altering the equipment specifi cations in 2012 Sophie Steenstrup (Norway) 14.48-15.00 ❙ Panel discussion: What else can the international ski federation (FIS) do to protect the athletes’ safety? Müller, Steenstrup, Gilgien, Kröll, Spörri

Thursday 16 March 19 Scientifi c Programme

14.00-16.00 Session D Free communications Room Van Dongen

SURVEILLANCE & YOUTH Chairs: Margo MOUNTJOY (Canada), Lars ENGEBRETSEN (Norway/Switzerland)

14.00-14.10 ❙ The functional movement test 9+ is a poor screening test for lower extremity injuries in professional male football #653 Arnhild Bakken (Qatar/Norway), Stephen Targett (Qatar), Tone Bere (Norway), Cristiano Eirale (Qatar), Farooq Aziz (Qatar), Johannes Tol (Qatar/The Netherlands), Rod Whiteley (Qatar), Karim Khan (Canada), Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar) 14.10-14.20 ❙ Risk factors for injuries in elite youth tennis players #563 Joost van Mechelen, Joske Nauta, Babette Pluim, Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands) 14.20-14.30 ❙ Shoulder injuries in talented competitive swimmers #714 Elsbeth van Dorssen, Janine Stubbe (The Netherlands) 14.30-14.40 ❙ Sports specialized risks for reinjury in young athletes: A 2+ Year Clinical Prospective Evaluation #549 Neeru Jayanthi (USA) 14.40-14.50 ❙ High prevalence and incidence of health problems in talented Dutch athletes #790 Angelo Richardson (The Netherlands), Ben Clarsen (Norway), Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands), Janine Stubbe (The Netherlands) 14.50-15.00 ❙ The Infl uence of Previous Injury History on Health and Fitness Outcomes in Junior High School Students #829 Carla van den Berg, Patricia K Doyle-Baker, Alberto Nettel-Aguirre, Sarah Richmond, Carolyn Emery (Canada) 15.00-15.10 ❙ Long-term consequences of interpersonal violence against children in sport #885 Tine Vertommen (Belgium), Jarl Kampen (Belgium/The Netherlands), Nicolette Schipper-van Veldhoven (The Netherlands), Filip Van Den Eede (Belgium) 15.10-15.20 ❙ The Effects of Serial Sports Training Risk Assessment and Counseling in Kids (T.R.A.C.K.) #558 Neeru Jayanthi (USA) 15.20-15.30 ❙ Injuries in elite Australian female cricketers #586 Nirmala Perera, Alex Kountouris, Joanne Kemp, Corey Joseph, Caroline Finch (Australia) 15.30-15.40 ❙ The development of a weekly e-diary for self-reported injuries and illnesses in Paralympic sports: The Sports-Related Injuries and Illnesses in Paralympic Sport Study (SRIIPSS) #600 Kristina Fagher, Jenny Jacobsson, Toomas Timpka, Örjan Dahlström, Jan Lexell (Sweden) 15.40-15.50 ❙ Concussion in : improved reporting, a more conservative approach or an increased risk? #678 Matthew Cross, Grant Trewartha, Simon Kemp, Colin Fuller, Aileen Taylor, Stephen West, Keith Stokes (United Kingdom) 15.50-16.00 ❙ Does Injury Defi nition Matter? The Infl uence of Injury Defi nition on Interpretations of Injury Risk in Pre-Professional Ballet and Contemporary Dancers? #789 Sarah Kenny, Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher, Jackie Whittaker, Carolyn Emery (Canada)

20 Thursday 16 March Scientifi c Programme

14.00-15.00 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ The Overhead Athlete: Fatigue & Injury Prevention - #36 Gretchen Oliver (USA), Hillary Plummer (USA)

Session G Room Lifar ❙ Evidenced-informed strategies for the prevention of chronic ankle instability following lateral ankle sprain - #127 Eamonn Delahunt (Ireland), Phillip Gribble (USA)

Session H Room Genevoix 1 ❙ Developing a movement control intervention for injury reduction in collision sports: Lessons from Rugby Union - #180 Keith Stokes (United Kingdom), Grant Trewartha (United Kingdom)

Session I Room Genevoix 2+3 ❙ ECG Interpretation in Athletes - #219 Jonathan Drezner (USA), Mathew Wilson (Qatar)

Session J Room Bosio 1 ❙ Making Sense of Concussion in Aquatic Sports - #253 James Miller (USA), Cees-Rein Van Den Hoogenband (The Netherlands)

Session K Room Bosio 2 ❙ Unique Aspects of the Periodic Health Evaluation for Injury and Illness Prevention in Paralympic Athletes: A Case-Based Discussion - #276 Cheri Blauwet (USA), Bill Moreau (USA)

Thursday 16 March 21 Scientifi c Programme

15.00-16.00 Session A Symposium 4 Room Prince Pierre

SPORTS-SPECIFIC ACL INJURY MECHANISMS AND IT IMPLICATION FOR PREVENTION Chairs: Takeshi MUNETA (Japan) & Roald BAHR (Norway/Qatar) 15.00-15.05 ❙ Incidence of ACL injury in each sports Takeshi Muneta (Japan) 15.05-15.10 ❙ Should ACL injury prevention be specifi c to type of sports? Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar) 15.10-15.20 ❙ ACL injury mechanisms and its prevention in football Markus Waldén (Sweden) 15.20-15.30 ❙ ACL injury mechanisms and its prevention in basketball and handball Hideyuki Koga (Japan) 15.30-15.40 ❙ ACL injury mechanisms and its prevention in alpine skiing Tone Bere (Norway) 15.40-15.50 ❙ ACL injury mechanisms and its prevention in badminton Eiichi Tsuda (Japan) 15.50-16.00 ❙ Panel discussion: Future strategies for ACL injury prevention based on the mechanisms Muneta, Bahr, Waldén, Koga, Bere, Tsuda

15.00-16.00 Session B Symposium 5 Room Camille Blanc

CITIUS, ALTIUS, FORTIUS – ENSURING SPORTS SAFETY MESSAGES HAVE MAXIMAL IMPACT Chair: Caroline FINCH (Australia)

15.00-15.05 ❙ Introduction to social marketing for large-scale behavior change Caroline Finch (Australia) 15.05-15.15 ❙ Who needs to hear the message and why? Identifying and knowing your target audience Ross Tucker (South Africa) 15.15-15.25 ❙ One approach does not fi t all - How to target the same message to different groups Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands) 15.25-15.35 ❙ Disseminating the story – The importance of branding to resonate the message Jiri Dvorak (Switzerland) 15.35-15.45 ❙ But does it work? – Tools for assessing message uptake, evolution and sustainability Caroline Finch (Australia) 15.45-16.00 ❙ Panel discussion: Top tips for achieving behavior change through sports safety messaging Dvorak, Finch, Tucker, Verhagen

22 Thursday 16 March Scientifi c Programme

15.00-16.00 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ Preseason assessment in athletes: How to plan preventive interventions? - #84 Luciana Mendonça (Brazil), Natália Bittencourt (Brazil)

Session F Room Poulenc 1 14.00-15.00 ❙ Taping and Bracing: Do they have a Role in Injury Prevention? - #104 Marie-Elaine Grant (Ireland / Switzerland)

Session I Room Genevoix 2+3 ❙ Beating Bugs with Technology - #865 Bill Moreau (USA), Charudutt Shah (USA)

Session J Room Bosio 1 ❙ How to conduct your sports injury study on modifi able risk factors with low risk of bias Karolinska Handball Study - a practical example - #275 Lena Holm (Sweden), Martin Asker (Sweden)

Session K Room Bosio 2 ❙ The Past, Present, and Future of Medical Records in the Prevention Injury and Illness in Athletes: The Team USA Model - #279 Bill Moreau (USA), Dustin Nabhan (USA)

16.00-16.30 Coffee Break

Thursday 16 March 23 Scientifi c Programme

16.30-17.30 Session A Symposium 6 Room Prince Pierre

THE BRAIN’S ROLE IN ACL INJURY PREVENTION

Chair: Eva AGEBERG (Sweden) 16.30-16.37 ❙ Introduction Eva Ageberg (Sweden) 16.37-16.49 ❙ The brain’s role in ACL injury prevention Charles Buz Swanik (USA) 16.49-17.01 ❙ Motor learning in ACL injury prevention Anne Benjaminse (The Netherlands) 17.01-17.13 ❙ Neuroplasticity - from theory to practice in ACL injury prevention Jochen Baumeister (Germany) 17.13-17.30 ❙ Panel discussion: How can we optimize ACL injury prevention considering motor learning? Ageberg, Swanik, Benjaminse, Baumeister

16.30-17.30 Session B Symposium 7 Room Camille Blanc

TEAM HANDBALL - TIME TO REDUCE THE INJURIES! Chair: Grethe MYKLEBUST (Norway)

16.30-16.35 ❙ Handball injuries – Epidemiology Grethe Myklebust (Norway) 16.35-16.45 ❙ 40.000 throws per season must have an impact on the shoulder: Biomechanics and imaging of the handball shoulder Martin Asker (Sweden) 16.45-17.00 ❙ Risk factors and prevention of overuse shoulder injuries in elite handball Stig H. Andersson (Norway) 17.00-17.10 ❙ Prevention of lower limb injuries – How do we do it? Grethe Myklebust (Norway) 17.10-17.20 ❙ Implementation of prevention programs in handball teams – how can we succeed? Merete Möller (Denmark) 17.20-17.30 ❙ Panel discussion: Prevention of handball injuries – where do we go from now? Myklebust, Asker, Andersson, Möller

24 Thursday 16 March Scientifi c Programme

16.30-17.30 Session C Symposium 8 Room Auric

PROTECTING THE HEALTH AND PERFORMANCE OF THE TRAVELING ATHLETE Chair: Sebastien RACINAIS (Qatar)

16.30-16.42 ❙ Interventions to combat jet-lag and travel fatigue Peter Fowler (Qatar) 16.42-16.54 ❙ Does international travel increase the risk of illness and injury in athletes? Martin Schwellnus (South Africa) 16.54-17.06 ❙ Traveling to a different environment – how to adapt Sebastien Racinais (Qatar) 17.06-17.18 ❙ Travel concerns for the Olympic and Paralympic athletes from a sports medicine physician perspective Wayne Derman (South Africa) 17.18-17.30 ❙ Panel discussion Racinais, Fowler, Schwellnus, Derman

Thursday 16 March 25 Scientifi c Programme

16.30-17.30 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ What psychological techniques work in injury prevention? Practical solutions and strategies - #87 Ulrika Tranaeus (Sweden), Andreas Ivarsson (Sweden)

Session F Room Poulenc 1 14.00-15.00 ❙ “Quicker, more skilful, more spectacular” - Rugby Sevens - How to deliver an injury prevention programme in a performance focussed environment - #757 Simon Kemp (United Kingdom), Jo Larkin (United Kingdom)

Session G Room Lifar ❙ Prevention of illness and injury in golf, a new Olympic sport - #156 Andrew Murray (United Kingdom), Roger Hawkes (United Kingdom)

Session H Room Genevoix 1 ❙ Electrocardiographic Interpretation in Athletes - #209 Mathew Wilson (Qatar), Jonathan Drezner (USA)

Session J Room Bosio 1 ❙ Harnessing Neurocognition for Sports Performance and Rehabilitation - #259 Daniel Herman (USA), Zach Sutton (USA)

Session K Room Bosio 2 ❙ Prevention of Concussion in sport: Cervical spine and Vestibular considerations - #293 Kathryn Schneider (Canada), Geoff Schneider (Canada)

26 Thursday 16 March Scientifi c Programme

17.30-18.30 Session A Symposium 9 Room Prince Pierre

TENDON PAIN: HOW TO DIRECT PREVENTION STRATEGIES BY UNDERSTANDING THE LOCAL AND CENTRAL CONTRIBUTIONS Chair: Jill COOK (Australia)

17.30-17.40 ❙ How little we know about local nociceptive drivers of tendon pain Jill Cook (Australia) 17.40-17.50 ❙ Corticospinal contributions to tendon pain and function pain Michel Coppieters (The Netherlands) 17.50-18.00 ❙ Perspectives on upper limb tendon pain Jeremy Lewis (United Kingdom) 18.00-18.10 ❙ Putting it together for clinicians and Tendon neuroplastic training Ebonie Rio (Australia) 18.10-18.30 ❙ Panel discussion: How do we use evidence and clinical experience to prevent tendon pain? Cook, Rio, Coppieters, Lewis

17.30-18.30 Session B Symposium 10 Room Camille Blanc

POSTCARD FROM THE THIRD WORLD – PREVENTION OF ILLNESS AND INJURY IN ATHLETES FROM DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Chair: Robin MITCHELL (Fiji) 17.30-17.40 ❙ Setting the scene – practicalities of illness and injury prevention plus athlete care in developing countries Robin Mitchell (Fiji) 17.40-17.50 ❙ Special considerations for athletes brought up amidst the health challenges of developing country environments Manikavasagam Jegathesan (Malaysia) 17.50-18.00 ❙ Prevention issues relating to diffi culties in accessing medical care and high technology imaging in developing countries Chris Milne (New Zealand) 18.00-18.10 ❙ Periodic health evaluation – additional elements required in athletes from developing countries, plus issues that athletes from developed countries need to consider when training or competing in developing countries Martin Schwellnus (South Africa) 18.10-18.30 ❙ Panel discussion Mitchell, Jegathesan, Milne, Schwellnus

Thursday 16 March 27 Scientifi c Programme

17.30-18.30 Session C Symposium 11 Room Auric

TWEETING, LIKING, FOLLOWING, SHARING: ENHANCING THE PROTECTION OF ATHLETES’ HEALTH NOW AND IN THE FUTURE Chair: Evert VERHAGEN (The Netherlands)

17.30-17.42 ❙ Successful examples of Twitter and Facebook to increase the dissemination of injury prevention - knowledge translation outcomes Karim Khan (Canada) 17.42-17.54 ❙ Effective social marketing techniques that ‘sell’ effective interventions Osman Ahmed (United Kingdom) 17.54-18.06 ❙ You are what you share; what does social media tell us about our audience? Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands) 18.06-18.18 ❙ The science of social to prevent injury. There is an evidence-base for what works and what doesn’t Claire Bower (United Kingdom) 18.18-18.30 ❙ Panel discussion: Our social tools are not an improvement to modern sports medicine, they are a challenge to it! Bower, Khan, Ahmed, Verhagen, Bell

28 Thursday 16 March Scientifi c Programme

17.30-18.30 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ How Olympic Weightlifting is raising the bar on Nations’ well-being - #295 Davy Snowdon (United Kingdom), Stewart Cruikshank (United Kingdom)

Session F Room Poulenc 1 14.00-15.00 ❙ Bodies of gods, teeth of yobs: promoting good oral health in sport - #297 Ian Needleman (United Kingdom), Julie Gallagher (United Kingdom)

Session G Room Lifar ❙ Risky business – can screening help us make quality return to sport decisions - #627 Nicol van Dyk (Qatar), Clare Ardern (Sweden)

Session H Room Genevoix 1 ❙ Emergency action plans – The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly - #326 Samuel Johnson (USA)

Session I Room Genevoix 2+3 ❙ Recovery, an effective tool for injury prevention in team sports. Where is its limit? - #629 Javier Peña López (Spain), Albert Altarriba Bartés (Spain)

Session J Room Bosio 1 ❙ Upper Extremity Examarama - #633 Mark Hutchinson (USA), Bill Moreau (USA), Ann Cools (Belgium), Babette Pluim (The Netherlands), Juan Manuel Alonso (Qatar)

Session K Room Bosio 2 ❙ A new method for evaluation of sport specifi c performance and injury mechanisms within competitions - 3D markerless motion capture - #664 Philipp Russ (Germany)

Thursday 16 March 29 Friday 17 March

08.30-09.15 Keynote 2 WHY SCREENING TO PREDICT INJURY DOES NOT WORK – AND PROBABLY NEVER WILL… Room Prince Pierre Speaker: Roald BAHR (Norway/Qatar)

09.30-11.00 Session A Symposium 12 Room Prince Pierre

PREVENTION OF TENDINOPATHY; HOW TO PLAY THE GAME? Chair: Johannes ZWERVER (The Netherlands)

09.30-09.35 ❙ Introduction: what is the extent of the problem? Johannes Zwerver (The Netherlands) 09.35-09.45 ❙ Risk factors and preventive strategies; what is the evidence? Johannes Zwerver (The Netherlands) 09.45-09.55 ❙ Adaptation of tendon to (over)load; helpful in prevention? Katja Heinemeier (Denmark) 09.55-10.05 ❙ Prevention of tendon structure abnormalities? Sean Docking (Australia) 10.05-10.15 ❙ Prevention of loss of tendon function? Hazel Screen (United Kingdom) 10.15-10.25 ❙ Prevention of tendon pain? Ebonie Rio (Australia) 10.25-10.40 ❙ Screening and prevention of tendinopathy in the (elite) athlete Jill Cook (Australia) 10.40-11.00 ❙ Panel discussion: How can we reduce the problem and impact of tendinopathy? - future directions for prevention research and implementation? Zwerver, Heinemeier, Docking, Screen, Rio, Cook

30 Scientifi c Programme

09.30-11.00 Session B Symposium 13 Room Camille Blanc

INJURY PREVENTION IN YOUTH SPORT: TIME TO “GET ON WITH IT!” Chair: Carolyn EMERY (Canada)

09.30-09.45 ❙ The public health burden and evidence for prevention of injury in youth sport and recreation Carolyn Emery (Canada) 09.45-10.00 ❙ Key considerations in understanding the implementation context in primary prevention in youth sport Carly McKay (United Kingdom) 10.00-10.15 ❙ Identifying high risk youth athletes through pre-participation screening, injury and illness monitoring? Grethe Myklebust (Norway) 10.15-10.30 ❙ Evaluating the effectiveness of protective equipment in youth sport Brent Hagel (Canada) 10.30-10.45 ❙ Social media and global approaches to injury prevention in youth sport and recreation Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands) 10.45-11.00 ❙ Panel discussion: Injury prevention in youth sport and recreation: Let’s get on with it! Emery, McKay, Myklebust, Hagel, Verhagen

09.30-11.00 Session C Symposium 14 Room Auric

GO BIG OR GO HOME: IS INJURY PREVENTION AMONG COMPETITIVE AND RECREATIONAL SNOWBOARDERS AND FREESTYLE SKIERS POSSIBLE? Chairs: Erich MÜLLER (Austria) & Torbjørn SOLIGARD (Norway/Switzerland)

09.30-09.40 ❙ A decade of injury data from FIS World Cup snowboarding and freestyle skiing Sophie Steenstrup (Norway) 09.40-09.50 ❙ The Olympic and Youth Olympic Winter Games experience Torbjørn Soligard (Norway/Switzerland) 09.50-10.05 ❙ Determining injury mechanisms in snowboarding and freestyle skiing: Learning from alpine skiing Erich Müller (Austria) 10.05-10.20 ❙ Can technology tell us if certain freestyle and snowboard course elements cause more crashes than others? Matthias Gilgien (Norway/Switzerland) 10.20-10.32 ❙ Limitations and opportunities in engineering safe snow park jumps Irving Scher (USA) 10.32-10.44 ❙ Designing tomorrow’s snow park jump James McNeil (USA) 10.44-11.00 ❙ Panel discussion: Future directions for injury prevention among snowboard and freestyle athletes Steenstrup, Soligard, Müller, Gilgien, Scher, McNeil

Friday 17 March 31 Scientifi c Programme

09.00-10.50 Session D Free communications Room Van Dongen

INTERVENTION STUDIES I Chairs: Karim KHAN (Canada), Caroline FINCH (Australia)

09.30-09.40 ❙ A study to evaluate the effects of a neuromuscular injury prevention programme (GAA 15) in adolescent males participating in hurling #838 Sean Kelly, Clare Lodge, Paul Miley (Ireland) 09.40-09.50 ❙ The Effi cacy of a Neuromuscular Training Injury Prevention Warm-Up Program in Junior High School Students #806 Sarah Richmond, Carla van den Berg, Oluwatoyosi Owoeye, Qian Shi, Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher, Brent Hagel, Alison Macpherson, Carolyn Emery (Canada) 09.50-10.00 ❙ The effi cacy of a movement control exercise programme to prevent injuries in youth rugby: a cluster-randomised controlled trial #667 Michael Hislop, Keith Stokes, Sean Williams, Carly McKay, Simon Kemp, Mike England, Grant Trewartha (United Kingdom) 10.00-10.10 ❙ Effi cacy of a movement control injury-prevention programme in an adult community rugby union population, a cluster randomised controlled trial #592 Matt Attwood, Simon Roberts, Grant Trewartha, Mike England, Keith Stokes (United Kingdom) 10.10-10.20 ❙ Is shoe drop a key factor for injury prevention in running? Part 1: an RCT on injury risk #564 Laurent Malisoux (Luxembourg), Nicolas Chambon (France), Axel Urhausen (Luxembourg), Daniel Theisen (Luxembourg) 10.20-10.30 ❙ Is shoe drop a key factor for injury prevention in running? Part 2: an RCT on running biomechanics #566 Daniel Theisen (Luxembourg), Paul Gette (Luxembourg), Nicolas Chambon (France), Axel Urhausen (Luxembourg), Laurent Malisoux (Luxembourg) 10.30-10.40 ❙ Prevention of musculoskeletal injuries among Dutch hockey players: development and pilot-implementation of the KNHB intervention #405 Vincent Gouttebarge, Victor Zuidema (The Netherlands) 10.40-10.50 ❙ Psychological interventions associated with injury prevention: A systematic review #675 Adam Gledhill, Eliot Murray, Dale Forsdyke (United Kingdom)

32 Friday 17 March Scientifi c Programme

09.30-10.30 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ Injury prevention in Olympic style boxing - past, present and future - #371 Jahnavi Dande (India), Anirban Mallick (India)

Session F Room Poulenc 1 14.00-15.00 ❙ From Paper to Practice - Developing and implementing sports injury prevention interventions that make a difference - #432 Alex Donaldson (Australia), Katherine Snedaker (USA)

Session G Room Lifar ❙ Hip joint stability training - not just for dancing athletes - #474 Susan Mayes (Australia)

Session H Room Genevoix 1 ❙ Preventing hamstring muscle injuries by sprint acceleration performance evaluation: What? How? When? - #502 Pascal Edouard (France), Jean Benoît Morin (France)

Session I Room Genevoix 2+3 ❙ Oxidative stress and Overtraining Syndrome - #545 Davide Susta (Ireland), Oleg Glazachev (Russian Federation)

Session J Room Bosio 1 ❙ Bringing complexity to sports injury prevention research: What it is and how to do it - #560 Sheree Bekker (Australia), Alexander M Clark (Canada)

Session K Room Bosio 2 ❙ Get them to the start line healthy – How to prevent illness in your team - #601 Yorck Olaf Schumacher (Qatar), Martin Schwellnus (South Africa)

11.00-11.30 Coffee Break

Friday 17 March 33 Scientifi c Programme

11.30-13.00 Session A Symposium 15 Room Prince Pierre

ACL INJURY PREVENTION WORKS – BUT NOT IN THE REAL WORLD? Chair: Tron KROSSHAUG (Norway) 11.30-11.40 ❙ ACL injury prevention works – but not in the real world? Kati Pasanen (Finland) 11.40-11.50 ❙ What have we learned from biomechanical analyses of ACL injury videos? Tron Krosshaug (Norway) 11.50-12.00 ❙ Are loading and movement patterns during jumping and cutting associated with ACL injury risk? Kam-Ming Mok (Hong-Kong) 12.00-12.10 ❙ Is lower extremity muscle strength associated with ACL injury risk? Kathrin Steffen (Norway) 12.10-12.20 ❙ Are muscle activation patterns during jumping and cutting associated with ACL injury risk? Jesper Bencke (Denmark) 12.20-12.30 ❙ Knee control, balance, strength or technique – which is more important? Mette K. Zebis (Denmark) 12.30-13.00 ❙ Panel discussion: How do we improve current ACL injury prevention programs? Krosshaug, Pasanen, Steffen, Mok, Bencke, Zebis

11.30-13.00 Session B Symposium 16 Room Camille Blanc

THE END OF COLLISION AND CONTACT SPORTS AS WE KNOW IT? THE PREVENTION OF CONCUSSION IN SPORT Chair: Cindy J. CHANG (USA) 11.30-11.35 ❙ Introduction Cindy J. Chang (USA) 11.35-11.47 ❙ Comparative Rates of Concussion in , Football, Rugby, other sports, and everyday life. Are contact and collision sports really the problem? Kimberly G. Harmon (USA) 11.47-11.59 ❙ Prevention of Concussion in American Football from professional to pee wee. Are policies in the NFL benefi cial or detrimental for concussion prevention at other levels? Margot Putukian (USA) 11.59-12.11 ❙ Models for Prevention of Concussion in Rugby Jon Patricios (South Africa) 12.11-12.23 ❙ Preventing Concussion in Professional Football (soccer) – opportunities and obstacles Laurence Gant (United Kingdom) 12.23-12.35 ❙ Preventing Concussion on the World’s Biggest Stage: FIFA, Strategies to Prevent Concussion and How this Translates to Youth Sport Jiri Dvorak (Switzerland) 12.35-12.45 ❙ Putting it All Together: Interdisciplinary Lessons for Reduction of Concussion across Sport Cindy J. Chang (USA) 12.45-13.00 ❙ Panel discussion: Chang, Harmon, Putukian, Patricios, Gant, Dvorak

34 Friday 17 March Scientifi c Programme

11.30-12.50 Session D Free communications Room Van Dongen

RISK FACTORS & LOAD Chairs: York Olaf SCHUMACHER (Qatar), Sae Yong LEE (South Korea)

11.30-11.40 ❙ How much rugby is too much? A seven-season prospective cohort study of match exposure in professional Rugby Union players #676 Sean Williams, Grant Trewartha, Simon Kemp, John Brooks, Colin Fuller, Aileen Taylor, Matt Cross, Gavin Shaddick, Keith Stokes (United Kingdom) 11.40-11.50 ❙ A large weekly increase in handball participation increases the shoulder injury rate in Danish youth handball #716 Merete Møller (Denmark), Rasmus Nielsen (Denmark), Jørn Attermann (Denmark), Niels Wedderkopp (Denmark), Martin Lind (Denmark), Henrik Sørensen (Denmark), Grethe Myklebust (Norway) 11.50-12.00 ❙ The relation between load and patellar tendon structure during preseason in volleyball players #780 Lucas Maciel Rabello, Ruth Ijtsma, Johannes Zwerver, Michel S Brink (The Netherlands) 12.00-12.10 ❙ Incidence and risk factors of injuries in Brazilian elite volleyball players: a prospective cohort study #430 Rafael M Pimenta (Brazil), Luiz C Hespanhol Junior (The Netherlands), João A Grangeiro Neto (Brazil), Alexandre D Lopes (USA) 12.10-12.20 ❙ Jumper’s knee: A prospective evaluation of risk factors in volleyball players using an overuse measure of injury #670 Kerry MacDonald, Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher, Sarah Kenny, Carolyn Emery, Willem H. Meeuwisse (Canada) 12.20-12.30 ❙ Risk factors for overuse shoulder injuries among 329 elite handball players: a prospective cohort study #569 Stig H. Andersson (Norway), Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar), Ben Clarsen, Grethe Myklebust (Norway) 12.30-12.40 ❙ Risk factors for groin injuries in elite male soccer players #418 Anne-Marie van Beijsterveldt, Igor Tak, Rob Langhout, Janine Stubbe (The Netherlands) 12.40-12.50 ❙ What pre-participation health complaints and athlete characteristics predict injury and illness at major Athletics championships? Cohort study at the Beijing 2015 IAAF World Championships #783 Toomas Timpka (Sweden), Jenny Jacobsson (Sweden), Victor Bargoria (Sweden/ Kenya), Julien Periard (Qatar), Sébastien Racinais (Qatar), Ola Ronsen (Monaco/ Norway), Karin Halje (Sweden), Christer Andersson (Sweden), Örjan Dahlström (Sweden), Armin Spreco (Sweden), Pascal Edouard (France), Juan Manuel Alonso (Qatar)

Friday 17 March 35 Scientifi c Programme

11.30-12.30 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ Comparing Adductor Squeeze Tests: Detection = Prevention - #409 Neil Light (United Kingdom), Richard Clark (United Kingdom)

Session F Room Poulenc 1 14.00-15.00 ❙ Innovative Injury Prevention Strategy: Using Breathing Exercises to Restore Motor Control - #435 Masafumi Terada (Japan), Ryoko Shiroma (Japan)

Session G Room Lifar ❙ Explosive Strength Training for Injury Prevention – It’s a hip thing to do! - #478 Marc Norcross (USA), Sam Johnson (USA)

Session H Room Genevoix 1 ❙ Endurance exercise in extreme environments – How to prevent injury and illness - #501 Stephen Boyce (United Kingdom), Andrew Murray (United Kingdom)

Session I Room Genevoix 2+3 ❙ How to use systematic reviews to inform quality decision making for injury prevention - #547 Clare Ardern (Sweden/Australia), Adam Weir (Qatar/The Netherlands)

Session J Room Bosio 1 ❙ How to prevent recurrence of hamstring muscle injury - #571 Rod Whiteley (Qatar), Bruce Forster (Canada)

Session K Room Bosio 2 ❙ Compensation and Insuffi ciencies: Moving Towards a Consensus for Screening Movement Quality in Athletes to Predict Injury Risk - #608 Jackie Whittaker (Canada), Anna Frohm (Sweden)

13.00-14.30 Lunch

36 Friday 17 March Scientifi c Programme

14.30-15.15 Keynote 3 TRANSLATING RESEARCH INTO ACTION: HOW TO MINIMIZE RISK IN OLYMPIC ATHLETES? Room Prince Pierre Speaker: Cindy J. CHANG (USA)

15.30-16.30 THEMATIC POSTERS SESSION Please refer to page 62 – 85 for full details Exhibition hall – Poster Area SESSION 1 – BIOMECHANICS Chair: Erich Müller (Austria) Posters #537 #788 #648 #628 #853 #454 #649 #869 #774 SESSION 2 - CARDIOLOGY & SUDDEN DEATH Chair: Cindy J. Chang (USA) Posters #860 #585 #543 #584 #423 #848 #623 #481 #583 SESSION 3 – CONCUSSION Chair: Kimberly G. Harmon (USA) Posters #898 #457 #654 #618 #759 #655 #651 #681 #737 SESSION 4 - ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS & MASS EVENTS Chair: Martin Schwellnus (South Africa) Posters #695 #612 #802 #803 #776 #615 #506 #701 SESSION 5 - EPIDEMIOLOGY OF INJURIES I Chair: Markus Waldén (Sweden) Posters #887 #810 #773 #726 #440 #475 #785 #815 #487 #797 SESSION 6 - EPIDEMIOLOGY OF INJURIES II Chair: Thor Einar Andersen (Norway) Posters #624 #813 #731 #733 #486 #718 #682 #900 #762 #711 SESSION 7 - EPIDEMIOLOGY OF INJURIES III Chair: Babette Pluim (The Netherlands) Posters #879 #441 #394 #621 #721 #702 #808 #897 #636 SESSION 8 - EPIDEMIOLOGY OF INJURIES IV Chair: Margot Putukian (USA) Posters #840 #645 #688 #459 #858 #465 #512 #872 #857 #498 SESSION 9 - FOOT & ANKLE Chair: Sae Yong Lee (South Korea) Posters #862 #417 #854 #520 #604 #652 #866 #671 #851 #809 SESSION 10 - FOOTBALL INJURY EPIDEMIOLOGY Chair: Jiri Dvorak (Switzerland) Posters #619 #725 #728 #764 #529 #408 #467 #609 #407 SESSION 11 - HAMSTRINGS I Chair: Gustaaf Reurink (The Netherlands) Posters #683 #424 #496 #546 #690 #453 #642 SESSION 12 - HAMSTRINGS II Chair: Carolyn Emery (Canada) Posters #875 #804 #513 #504 #691 #404 #510 #643 SESSION 13 – HIP Chair: Per Hölmich (Denmark/Qatar) Posters #605 #473 #821 #820 #819 SESSION 14 - ICE HOCKEY Chair: Willem Meeuwisse (Canada) Posters #1148 #544 #744 #647 #439 #450 #579 #742

Friday 17 March 37 Scientifi c Programme

SESSION 15 – IMPLEMENTATION Chair: Caroline Finch (Australia) Posters #565 #795 #578 #779 #677 #750 #704 #715 #480 #660 SESSION 16 - KNEE I Chair: Takeshi Muneta (Japan) Posters #793 #530 #836 #896 #458 #602 #656 #794 SESSION 17 - KNEE II Chair: Lars Engebretsen (Norway/Switzerland) Posters #661 #699 #719 #700 #871 #617 #846 #471 SESSION 18 - KNEE III Chair: Hideyuki Koga (Japan) Posters #517 #415 #572 #864 #570 #420 #634 #766 SESSION 19 - METHODOLOGY FOR INJURY SURVEILLANCE Chair: Karim Khan (Canada) Posters #505 #463 #511 #680 #455 #943 #646 #508 SESSION 20 - MOVEMENT QUALITY SCREENING TESTS Chair: Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands) Posters #717 #488 #590 #452 #859 SESSION 21 - NON-INJURY HEALTH ISSUES Chair: Antonio Pelliccia (Italy) Posters #777 #538 #870 #539 #576 #422 #626 SESSION 22 - PREVENTING RUGBY INJURIES Chair: Simon Kemp (United Kingdom) Posters #482 #589 #891 #484 #416 #754 #748 #684 SESSION 23 - RTP & INJURY CONSEQUENCES Chair: Cheri Blauwet (USA) Posters #568 #800 #722 #644 #577 #855 #658 #378 #426 SESSION 24 - RUGBY INJURY EPIDEMIOLOGY Chair: Jon Patricios (South Africa) Posters #659 #791 #812 #411 #466 #886 #753 #630 SESSION 25 - RUNNING INJURIES Chair: Jonathan Drezner (USA) Posters #761 #433 #492 #775 #533 #868 #867 #712 #771 SESSION 26 - SCREENING FOR INJURY RISK Chair: York Olaf Schumacher (Qatar) Posters #674 #631 #388 #489 #503 #826 #446 #625 #614 SESSION 27 - UPPER EXTREMITY Chair: Ann Cools (Belgium) Posters #751 #392 #536 #551 #735 #835 #689 #818 SESSION 28 - UPPER EXTREMITY & SPINE Chair: Rod Whiteley (Qatar) Posters #845 #376 #668 #419 #798 #515 #831 SESSION 29 - YOUTH & FEMALE ATHLETES Chair: Margo Mountjoy (Canada) Posters #548 #811 #591 #554 #663 #720

16.30-17.00 Coffee Break

38 Friday 17 March Scientifi c Programme

17.00-18.00 Session A Symposium 17 Room Prince Pierre

PREVENTING GROIN INJURIES IN FOOTBALL – BEYOND THE ”TIME-LOSS” APPROACH Chairs: Per HÖLMICH (Denmark/Qatar) & Thor Einar ANDERSEN (Norway)

17.00-17.10 ❙ Advances in groin injury prevention and management – from confusion towards consensus Per Hölmich (Denmark/Qatar) 17.10-17.20 ❙ Injury incidence and prevalence - Describing the entire groin injury iceberg Thor Einar Andersen (Norway) 17.20-17.30 ❙ Strength and fl exibility factors related to groin injury Kristian Thorborg (Denmark) 17.30-17.45 ❙ Prevention of groin injuries in football: First RCT including prevalence parameters Joar Harøy (Norway) 17.45-18.00 ❙ Panel discussion: Sports medicine challenges in a diffi cult anatomical region Hölmich, Andersen, Thorborg, Harøy

17.00-18.00 Session B Symposium 18 Room Camille Blanc

GAME OVER: TIME TO BLOW THE WHISTLE ON PSYCHOLOGICAL INJURY IN SPORT Chair: Margo MOUNTJOY (Canada) 17.00-17.05 ❙ Introduction - preventing psychological harm Margo Mountjoy (Canada) 17.05-17.15 ❙ Psychological Abuse: What is it? Tricia Leahy (Hong Kong) 17.15-17.25 ❙ The Science Base: What is the evidence? Kari Fasting (Norway) 17.25-17.35 ❙ Prevention: primary + secondary strategies Margo Mountjoy (Canada) 17.35-17.45 ❙ Implementing prevention programs in the sport setting Kathy Martin (USA/United Kingdom) 17.45-18.00 ❙ Panel discussion: Preventing Psychological Injury Mountjoy, Leahy, Martin, Fasting

Friday 17 March 39 Scientifi c Programme

17.00-18.00 Session C Symposium 19 Room Auric

OPTIMIZING YOUR INJURY SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM: STRATEGIES TO MAXIMIZE PREVENTION Chair: Ian SHRIER (Canada)

17.00-17.04 ❙ Chair Introduction Ian Shrier (Canada) 17.04-17.16 ❙ Mini surveillance systems to optimize local injury prevention: What do you do when you are not the IOC? Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands) 17.16-17.28 ❙ How to overcome common errors and challenges in injury surveillance methods to develop better prevention programs Ian Shrier (Canada) 17.28-17.40 ❙ Preventing subsequent injuries: Understanding that re-injuries are not just more injuries Caroline Finch (Australia) 17.40-18.00 ❙ Panel discussion Shrier, Verhagen, Finch

40 Friday 17 March Scientifi c Programme

17.00-18.50 Session D Free communications Room Van Dongen

BIOMECHANICS & EXTERNAL RISK FACTORS Chairs: Erich MÜLLER (Austria), Takeshi MUNETA (Japan)

17.00-17.10 ❙ No association between static and dynamic postural control and ACL injury risk among female elite handball and football players #781 Steffen Kathrin (Norway), Agnethe Nilstad (Norway), Tron Krosshaug (Norway), Kati Pasanen (Finland), Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar) 17.10-17.20 ❙ Landing with less hip fl exion is associated with increased risk of ACL injuries in young female team sports players #765 Mari Leppänen (Finland), Kati Pasanen (Finland), Tron Krosshaug (Norway), Pekka Kannus (Finland), Tommi Vasankari (Finland), Jari Parkkari (Finland) 17.20-17.30 ❙ Association between Frontal Plane Knee Control and Acute Lower Extremity Injuries #666 Anu Räisänen (Finland), Kati Pasanen (Finland), Tron Krosshaug (Norway), Pekka Kannus (Finland), Tommi Vasankari (Finland), Jari Parkkari (Finland) 17.30-17.40 ❙ Risk factors for non-contact anterior cruciate ligament injury in Japanese female high school basketball and handball players. A prospective three-year cohort study #588 Yosuke Shima, Junsuke Nakase, Katsuhiko Kitaoka, Hitoaki Numata, Takeshi Oshima, Yasushi Takata, Takashi Kobayashi, Hiroyuki Tsuchiya (Japan) 17.40-17.50 ❙ Kinetic chain related risk factors for the development of lower extremity injuries in women: a prospective study #381 Ruth Verrelst (Belgium), Damien Van Tiggelen (Belgium), Roel De Ridder (Belgium), Erik Witvrouw (Qatar) 17.50-18.00 ❙ What separates an individual at risk of ACL injury? A fi rst step towards an ACL-risk movement passport #693 Raihana Sharir (United Kingdom), Jos Vanrenterghem (Belgium), Mark Robinson (United Kingdom), Keith George (United Kingdom) 18.00-18.10 ❙ 2D Video Feedback Improves Landing Technique in Elite Female Handball Players #507 Anne Benjaminse, Ina Janssen, Wytze Postma, Bert Otten (The Netherlands) 18.10-18.20 ❙ Mitigation of ACL rupture in alpine skiing through ski bindings #892 Rick Howell (USA) 18.20-18.30 ❙ Transfer of a Jump-Landing Task to Sidestep Cutting: Implications for ACL Injury Prevention #509 Anne Benjaminse, Wouter Welling, Bert Otten, Alli Gokeler (The Netherlands) 18.30-18.40 ❙ Man-made jumps in terrain-parks and the risk of severe ski-patrol reported injuries in alpine skiers and snowboarders #727 Claude Goulet, Denis Hamel, Benoit Tremblay, Olivier Audet, Brent E. Hagel (Canada) 18.40-18.50 ❙ No relationship between fl oor type and match injury patterns in German men’s professional handball #476 Thomas Henke, Patrick Luig (Germany)

Friday 17 March 41 Scientifi c Programme

17.00-18.00 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ Football injury epidemiological surveillance experience: past, present and future - #413 Karim Chamari (Qatar), Mokhtar Chaabane (Qatar)

Session F Room Poulenc 1 14.00-15.00 ❙ The Elite Overhead Athlete’s Shoulder: Balancing on the Continuum between Performance and Pathology - #443 Stijn Bogaerts (Belgium), Styn Vereecken (Belgium)

Session G Room Lifar ❙ What does a multiscale modelling approach add to the analysis of injury mechanisms in sport impacts? The quest for valid measures and the missing knowledge - #491 Ezio Preatoni (United Kingdom), Dario Cazzola (United Kingdom)

Session I Room Genevoix 2+3 ❙ Prevention and Rehabilitation in Sports 2.0 - #557 Sven Friese (Germany)

Session J Room Bosio 1 ❙ Return to sport after ACL reconstruction: What to know? What to do? - #456 Bart Dingenen (Belgium), Alli Gokeler (The Netherlands)

Session K Room Bosio 2 ❙ Modern protection equipment in Olympic sports - Better injury prevention and earlier return to play?! - #610 Werner Krutsch (Germany), Karlheinz Waibel (Germany), Hartmut Semsch (Germany)

42 Friday 17 March Scientifi c Programme

18.00-19.00 Session A Head-to-Head debate 2 Room Prince Pierre

ENOUGH IS ENOUGH – OR IS IT? CAN WE STOP CONDUCTING RCTs AND ACCEPT WE HAVE ENOUGH EVIDENCE TO FULLY INFORM SPORTS INJURY PREVENTION? Chair: Caroline FINCH (Australia) 18.00-18.05 ❙ Setting the scene for the debate and introduction to the debate format and speakers Caroline Finch (Australia) 18.05-18.15 ❙ Randomised controlled trials – the only evidence that should inform practice and policy for injury prevention in sport Speaker for the negative: Carolyn Emery (Canada) 18.15-18.25 ❙ To truly understand prevention and its challenges, observation of reality is what is needed Speaker for the affi rmative: Ian Shrier (Canada) 18.25-18.31 ❙ Rebuttals Carolyn Emery (Canada) and Ian Shrier (Canada) 18.31-18.41 ❙ Audience discussion 18.41-18.45 ❙ Chair’s sum-up and audience voting Caroline Finch (Australia)

18.00-19.00 Session B Symposium 20 Room Camille Blanc

LEADERSHIP: A VITAL INGREDIENT IN THE RECIPE FOR IMPLEMENTING HEALTH PROTECTION AND INJURY PREVENTION INTERVENTIONS IN SPORT Chairs: Alex DONALDSON (Australia) & Mario BIZZINI (Switzerland) 18.00-18.05 ❙ Introduction – the role of leadership in program and policy implementation Alex Donaldson (Australia) 18.05-18.15 ❙ The leadership role of International Sport Federations in implementing health protection, injury prevention and health promotion interventions in sport Margo Mountjoy (Canada) 18.15-18.25 ❙ Implementing the 11+ across international borders Mario Bizzini (Switzerland) 18.25-18.35 ❙ Leading and implementing changes in South African Rugby Union using an evidence-driven and pragmatic approach Wayne Viljoen (South Africa) 18.35-18.45 ❙ Injury prevention in community sport – the leadership role of the coach in implementing FootyFirst Alex Donaldson (Australia) 18.45-19.00 ❙ Panel discussion: Generating political, federation and stakeholder support for injury prevention and health protection across the sporting spectrum: what we know and what we need to get better at Donaldson, Bizzini, Mountjoy, Viljoen

Friday 17 March 43 Scientifi c Programme

18.00-19.00 Session C Symposium 21 Room Auric

BODIES OF GODS, TEETH OF YOBS - PREVENTING POOR ORAL HEALTH IN SPORT SPORT Chair: Ian NEEDLEMAN (United Kingdom) 18.00-18.10 ❙ Poor oral health of athletes – what do we know? Ian Needleman (United Kingdom) 18.10-18.20 ❙ Dental erosion, dental caries, sport and prevention Adrian Lussi (Switzerland) 18.20-18.25 ❙ Periodontal disease, infl ammatory burden and performance Ian Needleman (United Kingdom) 18.25-18.35 ❙ The impact of poor oral health on performance Julie Gallagher (United Kingdom) 18.35-18.45 ❙ Screening and preventive interventions: developing a strategy Paul Ashley (United Kingdom) 18.45-19.00 ❙ Panel discussion: How extensive is the impact of oral health in sport and what are the solutions? Needleman, Lussi, Gallagher, Ashley

44 Friday 17 March Scientifi c Programme

18.00-19.00 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ Hamstring injury rehabilitation and prevention of reinjury using lengthened state eccentric training - #421 Malachy P McHugh (USA), Timothy F Tyler (USA)

Session F Room Poulenc 1 14.00-15.00 ❙ Peeking behind the curtain; how to use qualitative approaches to develop optimized care and prevention for athletes - #573 Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands), Caroline Bolling (The Netherlands)

Session H Room Genevoix 1 ❙ Self-taping techniques for sport injury prevention - #525 Maria António Castro (Portugal), José Esteves (Portugal)

Session I Room Genevoix 2+3 ❙ Ultrasound Measurement of Subcutaneous Adipose Tissue in Elite Athletes 2 - #559 Wolfram Müller (Austria), Alfred Fürhapter-Rieger (Austria), Tim Ackland (Australia), Jorunn Kaiander-Sundgot-Borgen (Norway), Timothy G. Lohman (USA), Ronald J. Maughan (United Kingdom), Nanna L. Meyer (USA)

Session J Room Bosio 1 ❙ The future is here and it is digital – are you prepared? How to make social media and digital tools work for you? - #582 Nirmala Perera (Australia), Karen Litzy (USA)

Session K Room Bosio 2 ❙ Reducing injury risk in elite female soccer - #616 Stephen Boyce (United Kingdom), Oliver Davies (United Kingdom)

20.00 SPORTS CELEBRATION NIGHT

Friday 17 March 45 Saturday 18 March

08.30-09.15 Keynote 4 MONITORING TRAINING LOAD IN TEAM SPORTS: SHOULD ATHLETES BE TRAINING SMARTER AND HARDER? THE TRAINING-INJURY PREVENTION PARADOX Room Prince Pierre Speaker: Tim GABBETT (Australia)

09.30-11.00 Session A Symposium 22 Room Prince Pierre HOW TO PREVENT THE PAINFUL SHOULDER AMONG THE OVERHEAD ATHLETES Chair: Grethe MYKLEBUST (Norway) 09.30-09.40 ❙ Introduction and epidemiology Grethe Myklebust (Norway) 09.40-09.55 ❙ Screening the overhead athlete for risk factors Ann Cools (Belgium) 09.55-10.05 ❙ The role of the neck and the thoracic spine in shoulder problems among overhead athletes Martin Asker (Sweden) 10.05-10.25 ❙ Shoulder injury prevention and implementation challenges Stig H. Andersson (Norway) 10.25-10.45 ❙ When is a thrower not a thrower? When he is a handball not a baseball player. Learning from the different throwing and striking sports for prevention of shoulder injury Rod Whiteley (Qatar) 10.45-11.00 ❙ Panel discussion: Prevention of the painful shoulder - where do we go from now? Myklebust, Cools, Asker, Andersson, Whiteley

46 Scientifi c Programme

09.30-11.00 Session B Symposium 23 Room Camille Blanc

SCREENING TO PREVENT SUDDEN CARDIAC DEATH: EVIDENCE, KNOWLEDGE GAPS, AND NEW DIRECTIONS Chair: Jonathan DREZNER (USA) 09.30-09.36 ❙ Overview: challenges and controversies in the prevention of sudden cardiac death Jonathan Drezner (USA) 09.36-09.51 ❙ Clarifying the goals of pre-participation/periodic health evaluations and cardiovascular screening: are they the same? Stephen Targett (Qatar) 09.51-10.06 ❙ Cardiac risk assessment in athletes: the concept of differential risk Kimberly G. Harmon (USA) 10.06-10.18 ❙ History that matters: Can we improve standardized heart health history questions? Irfan Asif (USA) 10.18-10.33 ❙ Evidence, rationale, and limits of ECG screening in athletes Sanjay Sharma (United Kingdom) 10.33-10.45 ❙ Ending the debate: a new paradigm for cardiovascular screening in athletes based on risk and resources Jonathan Drezner (USA) 10.45-11.00 ❙ Panel discussion: Drezner, Targett, Harmon, Asif, Sharma

09.30-11.00 Session C Symposium 24 Room Auric OVERLOAD IN THE ELITE YOUTH ATHLETE: CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS Chairs: Roald BAHR (Norway/Qatar) & Michael F. BERGERON (USA) 09.30-09.40 ❙ Setting the scene - What is the magnitude and nature of the problem? Christine Holm Moseid (Norway) 09.40-09.55 ❙ Are we nurturing or degrading talent? Amanda Johnson (Qatar) 09.55-10.10 ❙ Sport specialization – Stairway to heaven or highway to hell? Neeru A. Jayanthi (USA) 10.10-10.25 ❙ How to prevent overload in the skeletally immature elite athlete – The case of spondylolysis in tennis players Babette Pluim (The Netherlands) 10.25-10.40 ❙ Are we destroying the most talented players – The case of jumper's knee in volleyball players Håvard Visnes (Norway) 10.40-10.50 ❙ The way ahead - future directions toward a more sustainable pathway in developing and safeguarding elite youth athletes Michael F. Bergeron (USA) 10.50-11.00 ❙ Panel discussion: How can research help to change the game of youth elite sports? Bahr, Bergeron, Moseid, Johnson, Jayanthi, Pluim, Visnes

Saturday 18 March 47 Scientifi c Programme

09.30-10.50 Session D Free communications Room Van Dongen

INTERVENTION STUDIES II Chairs: Evert VERHAGEN (The Netherlands), Martin SCHWELLNUS (South Africa)

09.30-09.40 ❙ Stay Healthy: An Australian Institute of Sport illness prevention project #852 Michael Drew, Nicole Vlahovich, David Hughes, Renee Appaneal, Kirsten Peterson, Louise Burke, Bronwen Lundy, Mary Toomey, David Watts, Greg Lovell, Stephan Praet, Shona Halson, Candice Colbey, Silvia Manzanero, Marijke Welvaert, Nic West, David Pyne, Gordon Waddington (Australia) 09.40-09.50 ❙ Preventive effect of an Athletics Injury Prevention Program on injury complaints with decreased participation in athletics: A pilot prospective cohort study #749 Pascal Edouard (France), Emmanuelle Cugy (France), Romain Dolin (France), Nicolas Morel (France), Kathrin Steffen (Norway) 09.50-10.00 ❙ The effect of preventive program in decreasing injury incidence in gymnastic athletes #703 Natalia Bittencourt, Mariana Weschenfelder, Marcela Leite, Gabriela Gonçalves, Rafael Freire, Luciana Mendonça (Brazil) 10.00-10.10 ❙ The effectiveness of a national body checking policy change on reducing injury risk in youth ice hockey #542 Amanda M. Black, Brent E. Hagel, Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher, Kathryn J. Schneider, Carolyn A. Emery (Canada) 10.10-10.20 ❙ The effect of body checking policy change on contact mechanisms in 13 and 14 year old youth ice hockey players #638 German Martinez, Leticia Janzen, Maciej Krolikowski, Nicole Romanow, Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher, Claude Goulet, Luc Nadeau, Carolyn Emery (Canada) 10.20-10.30 ❙ Preventing concussions in youth ice hockey: the effect of local body checking policy change #740 Amanda M. Black, Brent E. Hagel, Kathryn J. Schneider, Willem H. Meeuwisse, Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher, Shelina Babul, Martin Mrazik, Carolyn A. Emery (Canada) 10.30-10.40 ❙ Effects of a prevention program focused on hip joint function on the incidence of anterior cruciate ligament injuries in female basketball players #594 Yorikatsu Ohmi, Norikazu Hirose (Japan) 10.40-10.50 ❙ Evaluation of the Effect of Policy Change on Physical Contacts in Youth Ice Hockey Using Video Analysis #640 Maciej Krolikowski, Brent Hagel, Luc Nadeau, Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher, Carolyn Emery (Canada)

48 Saturday 18 March Scientifi c Programme

09.30-10.30 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ Orienting biomechanics research for sports injury prevention - #669 Andrew McIntosh (Australia),Tron Krosshaug (Norway)

Session F Room Poulenc 1 14.00-15.00 ❙ Swimming faster by training harder; an experience of a novel screening programme in elite swimmers - #710 Jon Greenwell (United Kingdom), James Hull (United Kingdom)

Session G Room Lifar ❙ Sport with boundaries Prevention sexual violence in sport using the ‘Flag system’ - #745 Tine Vertommen (Belgium), Kristine De Martelaer (Belgium/The Netherlands)

Session H Room Genevoix 1 ❙ Athletic footwear in 2016. Minimalism, Maximalism and futurism. What can we expect? - #760 Simon Bartold (Australia)

Session I Room Genevoix 2+3 ❙ The role of equipment design & innovation in injury prevention and management - lessons from team GB Rio 2016 - #825 Lucy Follett (United Kingdom), Caroline Lander (United Kingdom), Ash Wallace (United Kingdom)

Session J Room Bosio 1 ❙ Optimizing load for injury prevention. The 3 Ms: Managing load, Maximizing performance, Minimizing injury - #841 Nicola Phillips (The Netherlands / United Kingdom), Phil Glasgow (The Netherlands/ Switzerland), Mario Bizzini (The Netherlands/Switzerland)

Session K Room Bosio 2 ❙ Proprioception Measurement in Knee Injury Prevention and Rehabilitation: Where Existing Tests Are Failing and Why We’re Missing the Target - #873 Nicholas Clark (United Kingdom)

11.00-11.30 Coffee Break

Saturday 18 March 49 Scientifi c Programme

11.30-13.00 Session A Symposium 25 Room Prince Pierre

FROM THE RESEARCH LAB TO THE SPORTING PITCH - EFFICACY TO EFFECTIVENESS OF PREVENTIVE INTERVENTIONS IN TEAM SPORTS

Chairs: Martin HÄGGLUND (Sweden) & Caroline FINCH (Australia) 11.30-11.35 ❙ Introduction - effi cacy of preventive interventions in team sports Martin Hägglund (Sweden) 11.35-11.40 ❙ From effi cacy to effectiveness - an overview of key concepts in implementation Caroline Finch (Australia) 11.40-11.50 ❙ The use of implementation science in developing and implementing prevention programs: experiences with FootyFirst Alex Donaldson (Australia) 11.50-12.00 ❙ Implementation of preventive interventions in community sports Caroline Finch (Australia) 12.00-12.10 ❙ Implementation of preventive interventions in the elite sport setting Grethe Myklebust (Norway) 12.10-12.20 ❙ Implementation of preventive interventions in youth sports Martin Hägglund (Sweden) 12.20-12.30 ❙ Targeting world-wide dissemination/implementation of the 11+ program - view point from a major sporting organisation Mario Bizzini (Switzerland) 12.30-12.40 ❙ Coaches are key players - how do we get them onboard? Coach perspectives on preventive training Hanna Lindblom (Sweden) 12.40-13.00 ❙ Panel discussion: From science to the sporting pitch – have we made the journey yet, or where do we go in the future? Hägglund, Finch, Donaldson, Myklebust, Bizzini, Lindblom

50 Saturday 18 March Scientifi c Programme

11.30-13.00 Session B Symposium 26 Room Camille Blanc

PREVENTING ILLNESS AND INJURY IN ATHLETES – IS THE PERIODIC HEALTH EXAMINATION (PHE) A VALUABLE TOOL?

Chairs: Stephen TARGETT (Qatar) & Håvard MOKSNES (Norway) 11.30-11.45 ❙ Short introduction on the purposes and benefi ts of the PHE Stephen Targett (Qatar) 11.45-12.00 ❙ What is the benefi t of the PHE in Olympic athletes and can it help to prevent injury and illness? Ben Clarsen (Norway) 12.00-12.10 ❙ What is the benefi t of a pre-season musculoskeletal exam in professional football players and can it help to prevent injury? Arnhild Bakken (Qatar) 12.10-12.25 ❙ Does a specifi c battery of screening tests really identify players at risk of hip/groin injury? Andrea Mosler (Qatar) 12.25-12.35 ❙ Screening and monitoring elite volleyball players - detecting early signs of overload for injury prevention Christopher Skazalski (Qatar) 12.35-12.45 ❙ Injury and illness prevention does not stop after the PHE - The link between the PHE and ongoing monitoring of Olympic athletes Ben Clarsen (Norway) 12.45-13.00 ❙ Discussion

11.30-13.00 Session C Symposium 27 Room Auric

CONCUSSION PREVENTION IN CHILD AND ADOLESCENT SPORT: ARE OUR CHILDREN’S BRAINS DIFFERENT?

Chair: Carolyn EMERY (Canada) 11.30-11.45 ❙ The public health impact of concussion in children. How do we measure risk and outcomes? Michael Makdissi (Australia) 11.45-12.00 ❙ Primary Prevention: Strategies to reduce the risk of concussion in pediatric sport participants? Carolyn Emery (Canada) 12.00-12.15 ❙ Secondary Prevention: Risk factors and prevention strategies to reduce the risk of re-injury in children Kevin Guskiewicz (USA) 12.15-12.30 ❙ Protective equipment in children: What can we learn from biomechanical studies? Andrew McIntosh (Australia) 12.30-12.45 ❙ Tertiary Prevention: Are there options for rehabilitation following concussion in youth to reduce time to return to play? Kathryn Schneider (Canada) 12.45-13.00 ❙ Panel discussion: Future directions for research informing best practice in the prevention of concussion in children participating in sport Makdissi, Emery, Guskiewicz, McIntosh, Schneider

Saturday 18 March 51 Scientifi c Programme

11.30-13.00 Session D Free communications Room Van Dongen

HAMSTRINGS & 11+ Chairs: Jiri DVORAK (Switzerland), Per HÖLMICH (Denmark/Qatar)

11.30-11.40 ❙ Including the Copenhagen Adduction exercise in the FIFA 11+ provides missing eccentric hip adduction strength effect: A randomised controlled trial #567 Joar Harøy (Norway), Kristian Thorborg (Denmark), Per Hölmich (Denmark/Qatar), Andreas Serner (Qatar), André Bjørkheim (Norway), Linn E Rolstad (Norway), Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar), Thor Einar Andersen (Norway) 11.40-11.50 ❙ Biomechanical changes with FIFA 11+ utilization over multiple soccer seasons #574 Amelia Arundale, Silvers-Granelli Holly, Marmon Adam, Zarzycki Ryan, Dix Celeste, Snyder-Mackler Lynn (USA) 11.50-12.00 ❙ The use and modifi cation of injury prevention exercises by professional youth soccer teams #650 James O'Brien, Warren Young, Caroline Finch (Australia) 12.00-12.10 ❙ Does higher compliance to the FIFA 11+ injury prevention program improve overall injury rate in male soccer (football) players? #709 Holly Silvers-Granelli (USA), Mario Bizzini (Switzerland), Amy Arundale (USA), Bert Mandelbaum (USA), Ryan Pohlig (USA), Lynn Snyder-Mackler (USA) 12.10-12.20 ❙ No difference in muscle injury rates during professional football matches preceded by three to fi ve days of recovery #770 Håkan Bengtsson, Jan Ekstrand, Markus Waldén, Martin Hägglund (Sweden) 12.20-12.30 ❙ The effect of Nordic hamstring exercise on hamstring injury in professional rugby union #679 Kate Evans, Morgan Williams (United Kingdom) 12.30-12.40 ❙ Impact of the Nordic hamstring and hip extension exercises on hamstring architecture and morphology: implications for injury prevention #460 Matthew Bourne (Australia), Steven Duhig (Australia), Ryan Timmins (Australia), David Opar (Australia), Morgan Williams (United Kingdom), Graham Kerr (Australia), Anthony Shield (Australia) 12.40-12.50 ❙ Hamstring injuries in major and minor league baseball: are they preventable? #707 Holly Silvers-Granelli, James Zachazewski, Bernard Li, Stephanie Insler, Bert Mandelbaum, Christopher Ahmad, Lynn Snyder-Mackler (USA) 12.50-13.00 ❙ Eccentric knee fl exor strength and hamstring injury risk in athletes with history of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction #739 Daniel Messer (Australia), Matthew Bourne (Australia), Ryan Timmins (Australia), David Opar (Australia), Morgan Williams (United Kingdom), Anthony Shield (Australia)

52 Saturday 18 March Scientifi c Programme

11.30-12.30 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ Stepping up Clinical Evaluation Tools: A novel method for assessing dynamic knee stability during a single leg squat - #685 Kerith Aginsky (Israel/South Africa), Maya Cale-Benzoor (Israel)

Session F Room Poulenc 1 14.00-15.00 ❙ Determining Brain Fitness to Fight: What We've Learned From Combat Sports - #723 Tad Seifert (USA), Charles Bernick (USA)

Session G Room Lifar ❙ "Blink and you’ll miss it"; The utility of real-time video review in the identifi cation of the concussed athlete - #755 Simon Kemp (United Kingdom), Martin Raftery (Ireland)

Session H Room Genevoix 1 ❙ Mirror mirror on the wall… which is the most appropriate statistical method of them all?: Correct statistical approaches for evaluating prevention strategies - #796 Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher (Canada), Alberto Nettel-Aguirre (Canada)

Session I Room Genevoix 2+3 ❙ ACL Prevention: Easy to get an athlete back, but how to keep them there? - #833 Miranda O'Hara (Australia), Nick Ames (Australia)

Session J Room Bosio 1 ❙ Practical Sideline Management of Dental and Orofacial Injuries for the Sport Physician - #843 Paul Piccininni (Canada), Anthony Clough (United Kingdom)

Session K Room Bosio 2 ❙ Sport psychiatry from perspective Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) - #889 Li Jing Zhu (China)

13.00-14.30 Lunch

Saturday 18 March 53 Scientifi c Programme

14.30-15.30 Session A Symposium 28 Room Prince Pierre

PREVENTING FOOTBALL INJURIES: INNOVATIVE APPROACHES FOR GETTING THE MOST FROM PROSPECTIVE INJURY DATA

Chair: Caroline FINCH (Australia) 14.30-14.35 ❙ Introduction Caroline Finch (Australia) 14.35-14.45 ❙ New ways to use data to identify risk factors – experiences from prospective injury monitoring of professional soccer () in the UEFA Champions League Martin Hägglund (Sweden) 14.45-14.55 ❙ Identifying changes in training load and other time varying covariates that impact on injury risk – experiences from professional Rugby League Tim Gabbett (Australia) 14.55-15.05 ❙ Using prospective data to drive the development of player welfare initiatives – experiences from professional Rugby Union Simon Kemp (United Kingdom) 15.05-15.15 ❙ The importance of tracking subsequent injuries – experiences from community-level Australian Football Caroline Finch (Australia) 15.15-15.30 ❙ Panel discussion: Setting the new research directions for prospective monitoring of injuries to inform injury prevention in all football codes Finch, Hägglund, Gabbett, Kemp

14.30-15.30 Session B Symposium 29 Room Camille Blanc

AS THE VICAR SAID TO THE ACTRESS - "ANYONE FOR TENNIS?". THE IMPACT OF INTENSE TRAINING ON THE ADOLESCENT, OVERHEAD ATHLETE

Chair: Michael TURNER (United Kingdom) 14.30-14.35 ❙ The demands of teenage tennis Michael Turner (United Kingdom) 14.35-14.45 ❙ Keep serving till the basket is empty! When does load become overload in teenage shoulders? Natalie L. Myers (USA) 14.45-14.55 ❙ Stand up straight and stop complaining! How many young tennis players have undiagnosed pars defects? Michael Turner (United Kingdom) 14.55-15.05 ❙ The concrete and the clay beneath my feet. Should we restrict all young players to playing on clay courts to avoid injury? Babette Pluim (The Netherlands) 15.05-15.15 ❙ Rubber ball or rubber band? Can we really prevent injuries in teenage tennis players? Mark Kovacs (USA) 15.15-15.30 ❙ Panel discussion: How can you best protect the health and wellbeing of adolescent tennis players? Myers, Kovacs, Turner, Pluim

54 Saturday 18 March Scientifi c Programme

14.30-15.30 Session C Symposium 30 Room Auric

PREVENTING EXERTIONAL HEAT ILLNESS IN YOUTH, PARALYMPIC AND ELITE OLYMPIC ATHLETES

Chair: Julien PÉRIARD (Qatar) 14.30-14.32 ❙ Exertional heat illness at the Olympics Julien Périard (Qatar) 14.32-14.44 ❙ Thermophysiological demands of competing in the heat Ollie Jay (Australia) 14.44-14.56 ❙ Exertional heat illness challenges for youth athletes Michael F. Bergeron (USA) 14.56-15.08 ❙ Thermoregulation barriers in Paralympic athletes Nick Webborn (United Kingdom) 15.08-15.20 ❙ Mitigating exertional heat illness risk in the elite Olympic athlete Julien Périard (Qatar) 15.20-15.30 ❙ Panel discussion: Population-specifi c challenges and solutions going forward Jay, Bergeron, Webborn, Périard

Saturday 18 March 55 Scientifi c Programme

14.30-16.00 Session D Free communications Room Van Dongen

VIDEO ANALYSES Chairs: Markus WALDÉN (Sweden), Sae Yong LEE (South Korea)

14.30-14.40 ❙ Landing-related ankle injuries do not occur in plantarfl exion as once thought: A video analysis of ankle injuries in world-class volleyball from the FIVB Injury Surveillance System #694 Christopher Skazalski (Qatar), Jacek Kruczynski (Poland/Switzerland), Martin Aase Bahr (Norway), Tone Bere (Norway), Rod Whiteley (Qatar), Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar) 14.40-14.50 ❙ Decision-making and technique: Evidence for increased head injury risk during tackling in Rugby Union #768 Ross Tucker (Ireland) 14.50-15.00 ❙ Video analysis of contact technique during head collisions in Rugby Union #490 Sharief Hendricks (United Kingdom/South Africa), Demi Davidow (South Africa), Wayne Viljoen (South Africa), Nicholas Burger (South Africa), Mike Lambert (South Africa/The Netherlands), Clint Readhead (South Africa), James Brown (South Africa/The Netherlands), Ben Jones (United Kingdom), Ken Quarrie (New Zealand) 15.00-15.10 ❙ Head Injury Events in Rugby Union: Description of high risk tackle events #763 Ross Tucker (Ireland) 15.10-15.20 ❙ A video analysis of mechanisms of shoulder injuries in Australian Rules football and a comparison to other football codes #942 Laura M Schwab (Australia) 15.20-15.30 ❙ Head impact characteristics in youth ice hockey #747 Declan Patton (Canada/Australia), Maciek Krolikowski (Canada), Carolyn Emery (Canada) 15.30-15.40 ❙ Video analysis of acute injuries during the 24th Men’s handball world championship 2015 in Qatar #562 Stig H. Andersson (Norway), Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar), Marco Cardinale (Qatar), Nebojsa Popovic (Qatar), Tone Bere (Norway), Grethe Myklebust (Norway) 15.40-15.50 ❙ Video-analysis of moderate and severe match injuries in German men’s professional handball #444 Patrick Luig, Hendrik Bloch, Thomas Henke, Christian Klein (Germany) 15.50-16.00 ❙ Video Analysis of Match Injuries in German Men's Professional Football #434 Christian Klein, Patrick Luig, Hendrik Bloch, Thomas Henke, Petra Platen (Germany)

56 Saturday 18 March Scientifi c Programme

14.30-15.30 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ Continuous monitoring in team sports: follow-up Belgian Field-Hockey team during Rio Olympics 2016 - #698 Steven Probst (Belgium), Arne Jaspers (Belgium)

Session F Room Poulenc 1 14.00-15.00 ❙ The menstrual cycle infl uence on performance parameters - #729 Patricia Doyle-Baker (Canada), Constance Lebrun (Canada)

Session G Room Lifar ❙ Does Core Stability have a Role in Injury Prevention? - #103 Marie-Elaine Grant (Ireland / Switzerland), Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands)

Session I Room Genevoix 2+3 ❙ Orthopedic bracing applications: Learn three taping techniques in 45 minutes or less - #834 Emma Jonsson (USA)

Session J Room Bosio 1 ❙ Decreasing the incidence of ACL injuries through graded dampening of the visual system during training - #844 Donn Dimond (USA), Matt Weissbach (USA)

Saturday 18 March 57 Scientifi c Programme

15.30-16.30 Session A Symposium 31 Room Prince Pierre

EVIDENCE-BASED INJURY PREVENTION IN PARALYMPIC SPORT

Chair: Wayne DERMAN (South Africa) 15.30-15.33 ❙ Introduction - the Paralympic Injury and Illness Surveillance Study Wayne Derman (South Africa) 15.33-15.45 ❙ Translating epidemiology to policy change for injury prevention in Paralympic football Nick Webborn (United Kingdom) 15.45-15.57 ❙ Injury prevention in Paralympic athletics – how does impairment type and event type matter? Cheri Blauwet (USA) 15.57-16.09 ❙ The epidemiology of injury in Paralympic winter sport and the impact of longitudinal data collection Wayne Derman (South Africa) 16.09-16.21 ❙ Engaging sport federations in meaningful change – translating injury surveillance to practice Peter Van de Vliet (Germany) 16.21-16.30 ❙ Panel discussion: Epidemiology and risk factor assessment for injury prevention in Paralympic Sport – what does the future hold? Webborn, Blauwet, Derman, Van de Vliet

15.30-16.30 Session B Symposium 32 Room Camille Blanc

PROACTIVE VERSUS REACTIVE: MONITORING ATHLETES’ HEALTH TO OPTIMISE SPORT PERFORMANCE THROUGH PREVENTION

Chair: Evert VERHAGEN (The Netherlands) 15.30-15.42 ❙ The problem of athletes showing up at championships with health issues Margo Mountjoy (Canada) 15.42-15.54 ❙ The performance limiting effects of illness and disease Martin Schwellnus (South Africa) 15.54-16.06 ❙ How to ride shotgun; monitoring the health status of athletes Ben Clarsen (Norway) 16.06-16.18 ❙ Providing the athlete and staff with understandable and useable health feedback Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands) 16.18-16.30 ❙ Panel discussion: Continuous longitudinal monitoring of athletes’ health is a prerequisite for a healthy and elite performance? Mountjoy, Schwellnus, Clarsen, Verhagen

58 Saturday 18 March Scientifi c Programme

15.30-16.30 Session C Symposium 33 Room Auric

IMPLEMENTING A NATIONAL INJURY PREVENTION PROGRAMME

Chair: Mark FULCHER (New Zealand) 15.30-15.35 ❙ Introduction - The ‘ACC Sportsmart Warmup’. Where are we at in New Zealand? Mark Fulcher (New Zealand) 15.35-15.42 ❙ How science can convince International Federations, Member Associations and administrative/political bodies to invest in the implementation of prevention programmes Jiri Dvorak (Switzerland) 15.42-15.54 ❙ Creating injury prevention partnerships Isaac Carlson (New Zealand) 15.54-16.06 ❙ Developing a sustainable delivery mechanism in Football. The Quality Club Mark Cam Mitchell (New Zealand) 16.06-16.18 ❙ Learning’s from the fi eld. What have we learned from two years of delivery? Mark Fulcher (New Zealand) 16.18-16.30 ❙ Panel discussion: Future direction and further opportunities for research? Fulcher, Dvorak, Carlson, Mitchell

Saturday 18 March 59 Scientifi c Programme

15.30-16.30 Workshops

Session E Room Scotto ❙ “To screen or not to screen” - musculoskeletal screening tests that make sense - #708 Andrea Mosler (Qatar), Nicol van Dyk (Qatar)

Session F Room Poulenc 1 14.00-15.00 ❙ Get hip with injury prevention by providing a correct hip screening examination - #741 Bill Moreau (USA), Marc Philippon (USA)

Session G Room Lifar ❙ A journey from research to strategy: Questions, answers and solutions to reduce the risk of head injury - #758 Ross Tucker (Ireland), Martin Raftery (Ireland)

Session H Room Genevoix 1 ❙ How understanding the mechanism of all musculoskeletal injuries is required for injury prevention - #817 Geoffrey Verrall (Australia)

Session I Room Genevoix 2+3 ❙ The compliance conundrum: How can we improve compliance in the world of injury prevention? - #832 Holly Silvers-Granelli (USA), Mario Bizzini (Switzerland)

Session K Room Bosio 2 ❙ "How many days to the Games?” A case-study analysis of the psychological impact of the timing of injury and recovery across the Olympic Quadrennial - #902 Tadhg MacIntyre (Ireland), Jessie Barr (Ireland)

16.30-17.00 Coffee Break

60 Saturday 18 March Scientifi c Programme

17.00-17.45 Keynote 5 PREVENTING SUDDEN CARDIAC DEATH: THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE UGLY Room Prince Pierre Speaker: Jonathan DREZNER (USA)

17.45-18.15 CLOSING CEREMONY Room Prince Pierre Closing remarks by the President of the Organising Committee Lars ENGEBRETSEN Closing speech by the Chairman of the IOC Medical & Scientifi c Commission Uğur ERDENER

20.00 FACULTY DINNER (by invitation)

Saturday 18 March 61 Thematic Posters

SESSION 1 - BIOMECHANICS

❙ ALTERED GROUND FORCE DURING CMJ IN SPORTS INJURIES IN PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL PLAYERS #537 Ruben Argemi; Julio Elverdin; Pablo Ortega Gallo (Argentina) ❙ ARE THE MUSCLE ACTIVATIONS DIFFERENT IN VARIOUS TYPE OF PUSH-UP EXERCISE? #788 Kam-Ming Mok; Christianne On Nor Anna Ho; Patrick Shu-Hang Yung; Kai-Ming Chan (China)

❙ BIOMECHANICAL ANALYSIS OF SINGLE-LEG SQUAT WITH ISOKINETIC AND CONSTANT RESISTIVE FORCE USING CONTROLLABLE EXERCISE EQUIPMENT #648 Yoshinori Kimura; Maki Koyanagi; Ken'ichi Koyanagi; Kouichi Mukai; Naruhiko Nakae; Noriko Tanaka; Takahiro Sakai; Shuhei Tada; Yumiko Satoda; Sayaka Kondou; Akio Inoue (Japan)

❙ EFFECTS OF ADDITIONAL PERTURBATION ON NEUROMUSCULAR TRUNK ACTIVATION PATTERN DURING CORE-SPECIFIC SENSORIMOTOR EXERCISE #628 Juliane Mueller; Omar Baritello; Josefi ne Stoll; Steffen Mueller; Frank Mayer (Germany)

❙ ETHNIC DIFFERENCES IN LOWER EXTREMITY DYNAMIC POSTURAL MEASURES AS POTENTIAL RISK FACTOR FOR ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT (ACL) INJURY #853 Chang-Young Kim; Young Min Chun; Sae Yong Lee (South Korea) ❙ RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MOTOR CONTROL ASYMMETRIES AND MOTOR PERFORMANCE ASYMMETRIES #454 Kornelius Kraus; Markus Heffels; Denise Rahn; Nicole Stukenbröker; Hans-Georg Scherer (Germany) ❙ THE EFFECT OF RUNNING NINE MARATHONS IN NINE DAYS ON PROPRIOCEPTION AND BALANCE #649 Nicola Relph; Katie Small; Adam Smith (United Kingdom)

❙ THE EFFECTS OF A 5-WEEK GOLF SPECIFIC STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING INTERVENTION ON SWING PERFORMANCE FACTORS #869 Daisy-May Kenny; Jessica Presnall; Ludmila Cosio-Lima; Greska Eric (USA)

❙ THE RELIABILITY OF 2D BIOMECHANICAL VARIABLES DURING MULTIDIRECTIONAL SINGLE LEG LANDING #774 Ahmed Alahmari; (Saudi Arabia/United Kingdom); Lee Herrington (United Kingdom); Richard Jones (United Kingdom); Anmin Liu (United Kingdom); Ziyad Neamatallah (United Kingdom)

62 Thematic Posters

SESSION 2 - CARDIOLOGY & SUDDEN DEATH

❙ CONGENITAL HEART DISEASES AND SPORT ACTIVITY: AN OBSERVATIONAL STUDY #860 Martina Rosselli; Loira Toncelli; Chiara Giannelli; Gabriele Mascherini; Giorgio Galanti, Benedetta Tosi (Italy)

❙ DEATHS IN ORGANISED SPORTS IN AUSTRALIA: A CASE SERIES REVIEW OF THE NATIONAL CORONIAL INFORMATION SYSTEM #585 Andrew McIntosh; Lauren Fortington; Declan Patton; Caroline Finch (Australia)

❙ ECG OF INDIAN ATHLETES - ESC VS SEATTLE CRITERIA #543 Jahnavi Dande; Anirban Mallick (India)

❙ EXTREME SPORTS, EXTREME RISKS. FATALITIES IN EXTREME SPORTS IN AUSTRALIA #584 Andrew McIntosh; Lauren Fortington; Declan Patton; Caroline Finch (Australia)

❙ IMPACT OF AN ULTRA-MARATHON OF 330 KM ON PLASMA LEVELS OF CARDIAC BIOMARKER #423 Caroline Le Goff (Belgium); Jean-François Kaux (Belgium); Laurent Gergelé (France); Grégoire P Millet (Switzerland); Guido Giardini (Italy); Magalie Viallon (France); Pierre Croisille (France); Etienne Cavalier (Belgium)

❙ LEFT VENTRICULAR REMODELING IN YOUNG BLACK ATHLETES #848 Giorgio Galanti; Loira Toncelli; Niccolò Gori; Valentina Di Tante; Gabriele Mascherini; Benedetta Tosi (Italy)

❙ PRE-PARTICIPATION CARDIOVASCULAR SCREENING OF ELITE GEORGIAN ADOLESCENT ATHLETES: CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE AND OUTCOMES #623 Lela Maskhulia; Valeri Akhalkatsi; Kakhaber Chelidze; Zurab Kakhabrishvili; Marina Matiashvili; Tamar Chutkerashvili; Ana Gogelia (Georgia)

❙ THE PREVENTION OF SUDDEN CARDIAC DEATH IN ATHLETES: CARDIOVASCULAR SCREENING PRACTICES IN UNITED STATES NATIONAL GOVERNING BODIES AND PARALYMPIC COMMITTEES #481 Brett Toresdahl; Cindy J. Chang; Jamie Confi no; Irfan Asif (USA)

❙ USING NATIONAL CORONIAL DATA TO IDENTIFY PRIORITIES FOR PREVENTING DEATH IN SPORT/RECREATION #583 Andrew McIntosh; Lauren Fortington; Declan Patton; Caroline Finch (Australia)

63 Thematic Posters

SESSION 3 - CONCUSSION

❙ COGNITION IN FORMER RUGBY UNION PLAYERS AND IMPACT OF CONCUSSION HISTORY #898 Patria Hume (New Zealand); Alice Theadom (New Zealand); Gwyn N Lewis (New Zealand); Kenneth L Quarrie (New Zealand); Scott R Brown (New Zealand); Rosamund Hill (New Zealand); Stephen W. Marshall (USA)

❙ CONCUSSION KNOWLEDGE, ATTITUDES, AND BELIEFS AMONGST SPORTS MEDICINE PERSONNEL AT THE 2015 CEREBRAL PALSY FOOTBALL WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS #457 Steffan Griffi n; Liam Richard West; Osman Hassan Ahmed; Richard Weiler (United Kingdom) ❙ CONCUSSIONS IN JAPANESE HIGH SCHOOL RUGBY PLAYERS: RESEARCH ON INJURIES, SYMPTOMS, AND SIGNS #654 Mana Otomo; Shun Torii; Mutsuo Yamada; Toru Fukubayashi (Japan)

❙ CONCUSSIVE INJURIES IN AN AMATEUR EMERGING U.S. COLLISION SPORT: RUGBY-7s #618 Victor Lopez, Jr (USA/New Zealand); Richard Ma (USA); Meryle Weinstein (USA); Patria Hume (New Zealand); Robert Cantu (USA/Ireland); Laurel Myers (USA); Christian Victoria (USA); Nisha Nadkar (USA); Answorth Anthony Allen (USA)

❙ DOES CONCUSSION EDUCATION HAVE AN IMPACT IN BEHAVIOURS AMONGST SCHOOL-AGE RUGBY PLAYERS? #759 Christopher Bosshardt; Courtney Kipps; Mike England (United Kingdom)

❙ METHODS TO ASSESS WEARABLE HEAD IMPACT RESPONSE DEVICES #655 Andrew McIntosh; Catherine Willmott; Biswadev Mitra; James Brennan; Bleydy Dimech-Betancourt; Teresa Howard; Jeffrey Rosenfeld; Declan Patton (Australia)

❙ PADDED HEADGEAR IN CONTACT FOOTBALL – INERTIA OR MOMENTUM? #651 Andrew McIntosh; Declan Patton (Australia)

❙ THE CROWD GOES WILD: THE DISSEMINATION OF CONCUSSION RISK INFORMATION ON TWITTER IN RESPONSE TO THE REMOVAL OF HEADGEAR IN MEN’S BOXING AT THE OLYMPIC GAMES #681 Carly McKay; Keith Stokes (United Kingdom)

❙ THE EFFECTS OF COGNITIVE MATURITY ON CONCUSSION ASSESSMENT IN LOW SOCIOECONOMIC URBAN HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETES #737 Tamerah Hunt; Jody Langdon (USA)

64 Thematic Posters

SESSION 4 - ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS & MASS EVENTS

❙ EFFECTIVENESS OF AN INTERMITTENT EXERCISE-HEAT EXPOSURE PROTOCOL TO SUSTAIN HEAT ACCLIMATION ADAPTATIONS #695 J. Luke Pryor; Riana Pryor; Douglas Casa; Lawrence Armstrong; Lindsay DiStefano; Jeffrey Anderson; Elaine Lee; Carl Maresh (USA)

❙ GENGHIS KHAN ICE MARATHON: PREPARATION, STRATEGY AND THE EFFECT OF EXERCISE IN AN EXTREME COLD ENVIRONMENT IN A GROUP OF EXPERIENCED ULTRARUNNERS #612 Stephen Boyce; Andrew Murray; David Scott (United Kingdom)

❙ INCIDENCE OF ACUTE TRAUMATIC INJURIES AND MEDICAL COMPLICATIONS IN 34 033 CYCLISTS PARTICIPATING IN A MASS COMMUNITY BASED EVENT – SAFER CYCLING #802 Jannelene Killops; Martin Schwellnus; Dina Christina Janse van Rensburg (South Africa)

❙ LEISURE CYCLISTS AT RISK OF MEDICAL COMPLICATIONS: OUTCOMES OF ONLINE PRE-PARTICIPATION SCREENING AMONG 22 650 ENDURANCE CYCLISTS, USING CURRENT EUROPEAN GUIDELINES - SAFER CYCLING #803 Jannelene Killops; Martin Schwellnus; Dina Christina Janse van Rensburg (South Africa)

❙ NOVEL DIRECT AND INDIRECT EFFECTS OF RISK FACTORS FOR EXERCISE ASSOCIATED MUSCLE CRAMPING (EAMC) IN A COHORT OF 41 698 DISTANCE RUNNERS #776 Esmè Jordaan; Martin Schwellnus (South Africa)

❙ RECREATIONAL RUNNERS` STRATEGIES TO COPE WITH INJURY AND ILLNESS DURING MARATHON RACE PREPARATIONS: CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY IN SWEDEN #615 Håkan Gauffi n; Bo Tillander; Örjan Dahlström; Henrik Nyman; Toomas Timpka (Sweden)

❙ SUBJECTIVE SLEEP QUALITY IN ELITE WOMEN'S INTERNATIONAL SOCCER PLAYERS PRIOR TO AN INTERNATIONAL MATCH #506 Stephen Boyce; Michael McKenna; Andrew White; Oliver Davies; Mark Dixon; Niall Elliott (United Kingdom)

❙ THE INCIDENCE OF SWIMMING-INDUCED PULMONARY OEDEMA DURING MASS-PARTICIPATION TRIATHLON RACES: OPTIMISING ATHLETE SAFETY #701 Ralph Smith; James Parkin; Nick Knight; Courtney Kipps (United Kingdom)

65 Thematic Posters

SESSION 5 - EPIDEMIOLOGY OF INJURIES I

❙ EPIDEMIOLOGY AND INCIDENCE OF INJURY IN ELITE NETBALL PLAYERS – AN INJURY AUDIT OF THE 2016 NETBALL SUPERLEAGUE SEASON #887 Gemma Best, Adam Gledhill (United Kingdom)

❙ FIELD HOCKEY INJURIES AMONG HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS IN THE UNITED STATES, 2008/09-2015/16 #810 Lauren Pierpoint; Rae Dawn Comstock (USA)

❙ FLOORBALL INJURIES DURING INTERNATIONAL TOURNAMENTS #773 Kati Pasanen (Finland); Merita Bruun (Finland); Tommi Vasankari (Finland); Minna Nurminen (Finland); Walter Frey (Switzerland)

❙ INJURIES IN ELITE U18 FIELD HOCKEY PLAYERS AT A MAJOR TOURNAMENT #726 Laura-Anne Furlong (United Kingdom); Udo Rolle (Germany)

❙ INJURY PATTERNS IN GERMAN MEN’S PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL AND HANDBALL – A COMPARISON #440 Patrick Luig; Hendrik Bloch; Christian Klein (Germany)

❙ MONITORING FIELD HOCKEY INJURIES: THE FIRST STEP FOR PREVENTION #475 Saulo Delfi no Barboza; Willem van Mechelen; Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands)

❙ PREVALENCE OF PATELLAR TENDON PAIN HISTORY IN BRAZILIAN VOLLEYBALL AND BASKETBALL ATHLETES #785 Luciana Mendonça; Natália Bittencourt; Juliana Ocarino; Sérgio Fonseca (Brazil)

❙ THE HEAD COACH INFLUENCE IN INJURIES FREQUENCY IN ELITE WOMEN VOLLEYBALL PLAYERS #815 Marcela Leite; Natália Bittencourt; Bruna Melato; Guilherme Bernardone; Tatiana Ribeiro; Leonardo Veloso (Brazil) ❙ THE WOMEN’S INJURY SURVEILLANCE EXTENSION FOR AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL (FootyWISE) #487 Lauren Fortington; Alex Donaldson; Caroline Finch (Australia)

❙ VIDEO ANALYSIS OF ACUTE INJURIES IN INTERNATIONAL FIELD HOCKEY #797 Udo Rolle (Germany); Till-Martin Theilen (Germany); Wiebke Müller-Eising (Switzerland); Peter Wefers-Bettink (Switzerland)

SESSION 6 - EPIDEMIOLOGY OF INJURIES II

❙ AN EPIDEMIOLOGIC COMPARISON OF INJURIES TO SKIERS AND SNOWBOARDERS TREATED AT UNITED STATES EMERGENCY DEPARTMENTS, 2000-2015 #624 Lauren Pierpoint; Blake Volkmer; Dawn Comstock; Morteza Khodaee (USA)

❙ EPIDEMIOLOGY OF ROCK CLIMBING INJURIES TREATED IN UNITED STATES EMERGENCY DEPARTMENTS, 2006-2015 #813 Lauren Pierpoint; Matt Klein; Rae Dawn Comstock (USA)

66 Thematic Posters

❙ INJURY AND ILLNESS PATTERNS IN COMPETITIVE SAILORS OF THE INTERNATIONAL SAILING FEDERATION SAILING WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS 2014 - A 12-MONTH RETROSPECTIVE STUDY #731 Darren Leong (Singapore); Ben Tan (Singapore); Carmen Vaz Pardal (Spain); Cindy Lin (USA); Jia Wen Kam (Singapore)

❙ INJURY AND ILLNESS SURVEILLANCE DURING THE INTERNATIONAL SAILING FEDERATION SAILING WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS 2014 #733 Darren Leong (Singapore); Ben Tan (Singapore); Carmen Vaz Pardal (Spain); Cindy Lin (USA); Jia Wen Kam (Singapore)

❙ INJURY INCIDENCE IN CROSS-COUNTRY SKIERS #486 Sonya Worth (USA/New Zealand); Duncan Reid (New Zealand); Sharon Henry (USA)

❙ INTRINSIC AND EXTRINSIC INJURY RISK FACTORS OF ELITE WINTER SPORTS ATHLETE IN TRAINING #718 Victor Wang; Frank Mayer; Klaus Bonaventura; Maria Wippert (Germany)

❙ SELF-REPORTED INJURY MECHANISMS IN CLIMBERS #682 Gareth Jones; Cara Woodard; Paul Sharples; Mark Johnson (United Kingdom)

❙ SKI AND SNOWBOARD SCHOOL PROGRAMS: INCIDENCE OF GRADE-SPECIFIC INJURY #900 Maya Djerboua; R Sran; T Mitra; K Russell; K White; C Goulet; CA Emery; BE Hagel (Canada)

❙ SPORTS INJURIES AND ILLNESSES IN THE LILLEHAMMER 2016 YOUTH OLYMPIC WINTER GAMES #762 Kathrin Steffen (Norway/Switzerland); Christine Holm Moseid (Norway); Lars Engebretsen (Norway/Switzerland); Pia Katrine Søberg (Norway); Olav Amundsen (Norway); Kristian Holm (Norway); Thomas Moger (Norway); Torbjørn Soligard (Switzerland)

❙ WHAT ARE THE RISK FACTORS FOR INJURY TO SKIERS AND SNOWBOARDERS IN TERRAIN PARKS AND WHICH STRATEGIES ARE EFFECTIVE IN REDUCING THE RISK OF INJURY? A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW #711 Olivier Audet; Tatum Priyambada Mitra; Carolyn A. Emery; Brent E. Hagel; Alison Macpherson; Claude Goulet (Canada)

SESSION 7 - EPIDEMIOLOGY OF INJURIES III

❙ EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDY OF TAEKWONDO INJURIES: 1-YEAR PROSPECTIVE STUDY #879 Bo Ae Son; Hee Seong Jeong; In Deok Kong; Sae Yong Lee (South Korea)

❙ EPIDEMIOLOGY OF INJURIES IN POLE SPORTS: EMERGING CHALLENGES IN A NEW TREND #441 Vasileios Mitrousias; Georgios Halatsis; Ioannis Bampis; Antonios Koutalos; Georgios Psareas; Athanasios Sakkas (Greece)

67 Thematic Posters

❙ EPIDEMIOLOGY OF SPORTS INJURIES ON HIGHLY TRAINED YOUTH MULTISPORT ATHLETES #394 Abdallah Rejeb (Qatar/Belgium); Amanda Johnson (Qatar); Cosmin Horobeanu (Qatar); Roel Vaeyens (Belgium); Erik Witvrouw (Qatar/Belgium)

❙ EPIDEMIOLOGY OF TRAINING INJURIES IN ELITE INDIAN JUDOKAS – A PROSPECTIVE STUDY #621 Jahnavi Dande; Anirban Mallick (India)

❙ INJURY TYPES, INJURY RISKED BODY PARTS AND SPORT TYPE SPECIFICITY OF ELITE ATHLETES #721 Victor Wang (Germany); Frank Mayer (Germany); Yi-Hsiong Hang (Taiwan)

❙ MUSCULOSKELETAL INJURY RATES IN MULTIDAY MARATHON RUNNERS PERFORMING A REPEAT COURSE #702 Katie Small; Adam Smith; Relph Nicola (United Kingdom)

❙ OVERUSE PROBLEMS IN ICELANDIC MALE HANDBALL #808 Elis Thor Rafnsson (Iceland); Grethe Myklebust (Norway); Roald Bahr (Norway/Qatar); Anna Frohm (Sweden); Ornolfur Valdimarsson (Iceland); Arni Arnason (Iceland)

❙ PROSPECTIVE INJURY STATISTICS DURING HIGH-LEVEL JUDO COMPETITION: AN IJF-EJU COLLABORATION #897 Maximilien JUNG (Switzerland/Malta)

❙ WRESTLING INJURIES DURING THE 2016 RIO OLYMPIC GAMES #636 Babak Shadgan; Szabolcs Molnar; Stevan Sikmic; Abdelghani Chahi (Switzerland)

SESSION 8 - EPIDEMIOLOGY OF INJURIES IV

❙ EPIDEMIOLOGY OF SPORTS INJURIES AMONG MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS #840 Shane Caswell; Matthew Prebble; Kaitlyn Romm; Jatin Ambegaonkar; Amanda Caswell; Nelson Cortes (USA)

❙ EPIDEMIOLOGY OF SPORTS INJURIES DURING DUTCH PHYSICAL EDUCATION TEACHER EDUCATION OVER THE PERIOD 2000-2014 #645 Maarten Barendrecht (The Netherlands); Carl Barten (The Netherlands); Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands); Bouwien Smits-Engelsman (South Africa)

❙ FRICTION OF SPORTS FLOORS IN GERMAN MEN’S PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL AND HANDBALL COMPETITIONS #688 Thomas Henke; Patrick Luig (Germany)

❙ INJURIES IN AUSTRALIAN FEMALE CRICKETERS AND THEIR TREATMENT SOURCES: AN ANALYSIS OF SELF-REPORTED SURVEY DATA FROM 2014-15 SEASON #459 Nirmala Perera; Alex Kountouris; Joanne Kemp; Corey Joseph; Caroline Finch (Australia)

❙ INJURY MECHANISMS OF THE KOREA LADIES PROFESSIONAL GOLFERS, 2015 SEASON PROSPECTIVE STUDY #858 Young Moo Na; Young Jae Cho; Hee Seong Jung; Sae Yong Lee (South Korea)

68 Thematic Posters

❙ INJURY RISK DURING DUTCH PHYSICAL EDUCATION TEACHER EDUCATION: A PROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY OVER THE PERIOD 2000-2014 #465 Maarten Barendrecht (The Netherlands); Carl Barten (The Netherlands); Bouwien Smits-Engelsman (South Africa); Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands)

❙ INJURY RISK IS DIFFERENT BETWEEN MALE AND FEMALE ATHLETES DURING 14 INTERNATIONAL ATHLETICS CHAMPIONSHIPS #512 Pascal Edouard (France); Nina Feddermann-Demont (Switzerland); Juan-Manuel Alonso (Qatar); Pedro Branco (Switzerland); Astrid Junge (Switzerland/Germany)

❙ IS AWARENESS OF PREVENTIVE TRAINING ASSOCIATED WITH DECREASED RISK OF INJURY? #872 Sten Rasmussen; Rasmus Oestergaard Nielsen (Denmark)

❙ ONE-YEAR FOLLOW-UP PROSPECTIVE EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDY OF INJURY TYPES IN THE KOREA LADIES PROFESSIONAL GOLFERS, 2015 SEASON #857 Young Jae Cho; Young Moo Na; Hee Seong Jung; Sae Yong Lee (South Korea)

❙ PREVALENCE OF MUSCULOSKELETAL PAIN IN ELITE ROWERS #498 Katharina Trompeter; Daniela Fett; Petra Platen (Germany)

SESSION 9 - FOOT & ANKLE

❙ ANKLE BIOMECHANICS AND JUMP PERFORMANCE IN HEALTHY AND CHRONIC ANKLE INSTABILITY INDIVIDUALS DURING LANDING: A TRIPLE BLIND RANDOMIZED CLINICAL TRIAL OF ANKLE TAPING EFFICACY #862 Hyung-pil Jun (USA/South Korea); Young-min Chun (South Korea); Jin-ah Kim (South Korea); Russell Baker (USA); Jeff Seegmiller (USA); Sae Yong Lee (South Korea)

❙ CHARACTERISTICS OF ANKLE MUSCLE ACTIVITY DURING TILTING MOVEMENTS ON A WOBBLE BOARD #417 Miho Morita; Yukio Urabe; Eri Fujii; Nobuaki Moriyama; Takahiko Yamamoto; Takuya Takeuchi; Shogo Tsutsumi; Shuhei Numano; Yuta Suzuki; Noriaki Maeda (Japan)

❙ EFFECTS OF REDUCED PLANTAR CUTANEOUS SENSATION ON GAIT KINEMATICS IN INDIVIDUALS WITH OR WITHOUT CHRONIC ANKLE INSTABILITY #854 Mi Hyang Chang; Tae Kyu Kang; Sae Yong Lee (South Korea)

❙ HOW IMPORTANT IS KNEE POSITION ON LANDING FOR ANKLE SPRAIN? #520 Maria António Castro; Orlando Fernandes; Manuel António Janeira; António VencesBrito (Portugal)

❙ PROXIMAL FIFTH METATARSAL STRESS FRACTURES; SCREENING AND TREATMENT FOR INCOMPLETE FRACTURES #604 Hiroko Ueki; Tomohiko Tateishi; Saisei AN; Daisuke Hatsushika; Hideyuki Koga; Takashi Ogiuchi (Japan)

❙ RESTRICTION IN HIP INTERNAL ROTATION AND 5TH METATARSAL STRESS FRACTURES (JONES FRACTURE) IN PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL PLAYERS #652 Yoshitomo Saita; Masashi Nagao; Yohei Kobayashi; Keiji Kobayashi; Hiroshi Ikada (Japan)

69 Thematic Posters

❙ THE EFFECT OF ANKLE TAPING ON SHOCK ABSORPTION CHARACTERISTICS OF LOWER EXTREMITY #866 Joon-Haeng Cho (South Korea); Hyung-pil Jun (USA/South Korea); Young Hee Lee (South Korea); Sae Yong Lee (South Korea)

❙ THE RISK FACTORS OF 5TH METATARSAL STRESS FRACTURE IN FOOTBALL PLAYERS #671 Sho Matsuda; Norikazu Hirose; Toru Fukubayashi (Japan)

❙ THE ROLE OF PLANTAR CUTANEOUS SENSATION AND THE PROXIMAL JOINT POSTURAL CONTROL STRATEGY TO MAINTAIN BALANCE IN CAI PATIENTS #851 Tae Kyu Kang; Jung Yeon Woo; Jae Seung Chang; Sae Yong Lee (South Korea)

❙ WEEKLY ANKLE LUNGE TEST SCREENING MIGHT HELP PREVENT ANKLE INJURIES #809 Mati Arend; Maarja Kalev; Jarek Mäestu (Estonia)

SESSION 10 - FOOTBALL INJURY EPIDEMIOLOGY

❙ EPIDEMIOLOGY OF MUSCLE INJURIES IN HONG KONG PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL #619 Justin Wai-Yuk Lee; Kam-Ming Mok; Patrick Shu-Hang Yung (China) ❙ EVALUATING THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN PSYCHOSOCIAL FACTORS AND FIFA 11+ IMPLEMENTATION INTENTION IN YOUTH SOCCER COACHES #725 Oluwatoyosi Owoeye (Canada); Muge Bulat (Canada); Carly McKay (Canada/ United Kingdom); Tate Hubka (Canada); Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher (Canada); Kathryn Schneider (Canada); Carolyn Emery (Canada) ❙ IMPACT OF A COMPREHENSIVE FIFA 11+ WORKSHOP ON YOUTH SOCCER COACHES’ TASK SELF-EFFICACY FOR PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION #728 Oluwatoyosi Owoeye (Canada); Muge Bulat (Canada); Carly McKay (Canada/ United Kingdom); Tate Hubka (Canada); Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher (Canada); Kathryn Schneider (Canada); Carolyn Emery (Canada)

❙ INJURIES IN 17-19 YEAR-OLD MALE AMATEUR SOCCER PLAYERS #764 Stefan Ackermann; Thomas Henke; Wilhelm Bloch (Germany)

❙ INJURIES IN MEN'S PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL #529 Christian Klein; Hendrik Bloch; Patrick Luig; Thomas Henke; Petra Platen (Germany)

❙ INJURY RISK AMONG FEMALE SOCCER PLAYERS IN ZIMBABWE #408 Risk Matiya (Zimbabwe) ❙ INJURY SURVEILLANCE OF AN ENGLISH PREMIER LEAGUE FOOTBALL CLUB ACADEMY BETWEEN 2012-2014 #467 Christopher Bacon; Carl Petersen (New Zealand) ❙ THE EFFICACY OF FIFA 11+ OVER A 6-YEAR PERIOD, IN ADOLESCENT FOOTBALL PLAYERS #609 Yasuaki Saho; Haruyasu Kato; Nakahori Chikako; Hiroshi Ikeda; Toru Fukubayashi (Japan) ❙ THE EPIDEMIOLOGY OF U.S. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL (SOCCER) INJURIES, 2005- 06 THROUGH 2013-14 #407 Morteza Khodaee; Dustin W. Currie; Irfan Asif; R. Dawn Comstock (USA)

70 Thematic Posters

SESSION 11 - HAMSTRINGS I

❙ ASSOCIATION BETWEEN HAND-HELD DYNAMOMETER MEASURES OF HAMSTRING STRENGTH AND FORCE OBTAINED FROM THE NORDIC HAMSTRING EXERCISE #683 Kate Evans; Morgan Williams (United Kingdom)

❙ CHANGES IN TORQUE-ANGLE PROFILES OF THE HAMSTRINGS AND HAMSTRINGS- TO-QUADRICEPS RATIO FOLLOWING TWO HAMSTRINGS STRENGTHENING EXERCISE INTERVENTIONS IN FEMALE HOCKEY PLAYERS #424 Anne Delextrat (United Kingdom); James Bateman (United Kingdom); Jos Vanrenterghem (Belgium); Daniel Cohen (Colombia)

❙ HAMSTRINGS TRAINING EFFECT ON HIP AND KNEE JOINT FUNCTION, MORPHOLOGY OF HAMSTRING MUSCLES, AND INJURY PREVENTION #496 Takashi Ono; Michio Tojima; Norikazu Hirose (Japan)

❙ IN-SEASON ARCHITECTURAL ADAPTATIONS OF THE BICEPS FEMORIS LONG HEAD IN ELITE AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALLERS #546 Ryan Timmins (Australia); Matthew Bourne (Australia); Morgan Williams (United Kingdom); David Opar (Australia)

❙ NORDIC HAMSTRING EXERCISE STRENGTH CHANGES OVER A SEASON IN ACADEMY FOOTBALLERS #690 Sam Huggins; Nicholas Davies; Kate Evans; Morgan Williams (United Kingdom)

❙ REPRODUCIBILITY OF THE DrGONIOMETER APP IN NORDIC HAMSTRING TEST ASSESSMENT #453 Stefano Vercelli; Alex Baldaccini; Francesco Sartorio; Elisabetta Bravini; Giorgio Ferriero (Italy)

❙ THE EFFECT OF EXERCISE PRESCRIPTION ON FORCE OUTPUT AND MUSCLE ACTIVATION DURING THE NORDIC HAMSTRING EXERCISE #642 Rob Buhmann; Anthony Shield; Casey Sims (Australia)

SESSION 12 - HAMSTRINGS II

❙ A COMPARISON OF THE ISOMETRIC FORCE FATIGUE-RECOVERY PROFILE IN TWO POSTERIOR CHAIN LOWER LIMB TESTS FOLLOWING SIMULATED FOOTBALL #875 Pedro E. Alcaraz (Spain); Anton Matinlauri (Spain); Afy Abedin-Maghanagi (Spain); Tomas T. Freitas (Spain); Enrique Martínez-Ruiz (Spain); Alberto Castillo (Spain); Jurdan Mendiguchia (Spain); Daniel D. Cohen (Colombia)

❙ A PREVIOUS HAMSTRING INJURY AFFECTS THE KICKING TECHNIQUE AND THIS IS INFLUENCED BY GENDER AND LIMB DOMINANCE #804 Archit Navandar; Santiago Veiga; Carlos García; Gonzalo Torres Marquéz; David Chorro; Enrique Navarro (Spain)

❙ HAMSTRING MUSCLE INJURY IS THE FIRST INJURY DIAGNOSIS DURING MAJOR ATHLETICS CHAMPIONSHIPS #513 Pascal Edouard (France); Pedro Branco (Switzerland); Juan-Manue Alonso (Qatar)

71 Thematic Posters

❙ INFLUENCE OF FATIGUE ON HAMSTRING MUSCLE FUNCTION DURING REPEATED SPRINTS #504 Pascal Edouard (France); Philippe Gimenez (France); Pierrick Arnal (France); Pedro Jimenez (Spain); Pierre Samozino (France); Jurdan Mendiguchia (Spain); Matt Brughelli (New Zealand); Jean-Benoît Morin (France)

❙ NEUROMUSCULAR RESPONSES OF THE HAMSTRING MUSCLES DURING UNANTICIPATED TRUNK PERTURBATIONS #691 Ayako Higashihara; Yasuharu Nagano; Hirofumi Ida; Kimitaka Nakazawa (Japan)

❙ PROXIMAL NEUROMUSCULAR CONTROL PROTECTS AGAINST HAMSTRING INJURY IN MALE FOOTBALL PLAYERS: A PROSPECTIVE STUDY WITH EMG TIME- SERIES ANALYSIS DURING MAXIMAL SPRINTING #404 Joke Schuermans (Belgium); Lieven Danneels (Belgium); Damien Van Tiggelen (Belgium); Tanneke Palmans (Belgium); Erik Witvrouw (Qatar)

❙ RECRUITMENT OF BICEPS FEMORIS MUSCLE REGIONS AT DIFFERENT RUNNING SPEEDS #510 András Hegyi; Basílio Gonçalves; Taija Finni; Neil Cronin (Finland)

❙ REGIONAL DIFFERENCES IN BICEPS FEMORIS FASCICLE LENGTH AND PENNATION ANGLE AFTER A SIMULATED SOCCER MATCH #643 Basílio Gonçalves; András Hegyi; Janne Avela; Neil Cronin (Finland)

SESSION 13 - HIP

❙ 95% PREVALENCE OF ABNORMALITY ON HIP MRI IN ELITE ACADEMY LEVEL RUGBY UNION; A CLINICAL AND IMAGING STUDY OF HIP DISORDERS #605 Gareth Farrell; F Wilson; K Denvir; B O’Connell; E Irwin; C Gissane; M Logan; F McGrath (Ireland)

❙ A CASE-CONTROL STUDY INVESTIGATING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN 3-T MRI FINDINGS, BONY MORPHOLOGY, AND HIP PAIN AND FUNCTION IN PROFESSIONAL BALLET DANCERS AND NON-DANCING ATHLETES #473 Susan Mayes; Peter Smith; April-Rose Ferris; Jill Cook (Australia)

❙ CHANGES IN THE HIP IN YOUTH HOCKEY PLAYERS OVER 5 SEASONS #821 Karen briggs; Marc Philippon; Shannen McNamara; Charles Ho (USA)

❙ PREVALENCE OF ACETABULAR LABRAL TEARS IN ASYMPTOMATIC YOUNG ATHLETES #820 Karen Briggs; Marc Philippon; Charles Ho; Shannen McNamara (USA)

❙ SPORT SPECIFIC PREVALENCE OF CHONDRAL INJURIES IN THE HIP #819 Karen Briggs; Marc Philippon; Christiano Trindade; Daniela Magione (USA)

72 Thematic Posters

SESSION 14 - ICE HOCKEY

❙ CONCUSSIONS IN INTERNATIONAL ICE HOCKEY CHAMPIONSHIPS AND OLYMPIC WINTER GAMES BETWEEN 2006 AND 2015 #1148 Markku Tuominen (Finland/Switzerland); Timo Hänninen (Finland); Jari Parkkari (Finland); Michael J. Stuart (Switzerland/USA); Teemu M. Luoto (Finland); Pekka Kannus (Finland); Mark Aubry (Switzerland/Canada)

❙ EFFECT OF PREVIOUS CONCUSSION ON SPORT-SPECIFIC SKILLS IN YOUTH ICE HOCKEY PLAYERS #544 Paul Eliason (Canada); Carly McKay (Canada/United Kingdom); Willem Meeuwisse (Canada); Brent Hagel (Canada); Luc Nadeau (Canada); Carolyn Emery (Canada)

❙ HELMET FIT IN YOUTH ICE HOCKEY #744 Declan Patton (Canada/Australia); Shelby Blackmore (Canada); Brent Hagel (Canada); Carolyn Emery (Canada)

❙ IMPACT TESTING OF DIFFERENT ICE HOCKEY BOARD DESIGNS #647 Kai-Uwe Schmitt; Markus Muser; Hansjuerg Thueler; Othmar Bruegger (Switzerland)

❙ INJURIES IN GERMAN MEN´S PROFESSIONAL ICE HOCKEY #439 Hendrik Bloch; Christian Klein; Patrick Luig (Germany)

❙ MOUTHGUARD USE IN YOUTH ICE HOCKEY AND THE RISK OF CONCUSSION AND DENTAL INJURIES #450 Dirk Chisholm; Christine Atkins; Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher; Kathryn Schneider; Carolyn Emery; Brent Hagel (Canada)

❙ THE EFFECT OF BODY CHECKING POLICY CHANGE ON OFFENSIVE GAME SKILL PERFORMANCE IN 13-14 YEAR OLD ICE HOCKEY PLAYERS #579 Ash Kolstad; Luc Nadeau; Paul Eliason; Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher; Claude Goulet; Carolyn A. Emery (Canada)

❙ TRAINING VOLUME AND CONCUSSION RISK IN MALE YOUTH ICE HOCKEY PLAYERS: A PRIMARY PREVENTION PERSPECTIVE #742 Tracy Blake; Kerry MacDonald; Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher; Carolyn Emery (Canada)

SESSION 15 - IMPLEMENTATION

❙ A CONCEPT MAPPING APPROACH TO IDENTIFY PERCEIVED FACILITATORS TO ENHANCE THE IMPLEMENTATION OF INJURY PREVENTION TRAINING IN YOUTH TEAM HANDBALL: THE I-PROTECT PROJECT #565 Eva Ageberg (Sweden); Sofi a Bunke (Sweden); Karolina Andersson (Sweden); Per Nilsen (Sweden); Alex Donaldson (Australia)

❙ EFFECTIVELY TRAINING PHYSICAL EDUCATION TEACHERS TO IMPLEMENT INJURY PREVENTIVE STRATEGIES INTO THEIR PE LESSONS #795 Sien Vercruysse (Belgium)

73 Thematic Posters

❙ FIRST STEPS TOWARDS PREVENTION OF MUSCULOSKELETAL INJURIES IN SPEED SKATING #578 Alexander T.M. van de Water; Matthias Hendricks (The Netherlands)

❙ INJURIES IN YOUTH ATHLETICS HAVE MULTIPLE-LEVEL CAUSES THAT CALL FOR AN ECOLOGICAL INTERVENTION APPROACH: A NATIONAL SPORTING COMMUNITY CONSENSUS REPORT #779 Jenny Jacobsson; Daniel Bergin; Toomas Timpka; James Nyce; Örjan Dahlström (Sweden)

❙ INJURY PREVENTION IN YOUNG ATHLETES: INFLUENCE OF PREVENTION- SUPERVISION ON COMPLIANCE #677 Josefi ne Stoll; Juliane Mueller; Steffen Mueller; Michael Cassel; Frank Mayer (Germany)

❙ SPORTS AND EXERCISE SAFETY IN FINLAND – LiVE: AN IMPLEMENTATION PROGRAM TO SPORT CLUBS AND SCHOOLS #750 Jari Parkkari; Kati Pasanen; Anne-Mari Jussila; Raija Oksanen; Anna Ojala; Katariina Autio; Pekka Kannus (Finland)

❙ THE DEVELOPMENT OF INJURY PREVENTION EDUCATIONAL TOOLS FOR EVALUATION IN CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS IN SCHOOL AND COMMUNITY SETTINGS #704 Maya Djerboua; Carla van den Berg; Sarah A. Richmond; Megan McKinlay; Kyla White; Brent Hagel; Carolyn Emery (Canada)

❙ THE FEASIBILITY OF A SPORTS PHYSICAL THERAPIST LED IMPLEMENTATION OF A PREVENTIVE TRAINING PROGRAM IN A DUTCH AMATEUR FOOTBALL CLUB #715 Maartje Verheul; Maarten Barendrecht (The Netherlands)

❙ THE TRANSLATION OF SPORTS INJURY PREVENTION AND SAFETY PROMOTION KNOWLEDGE: INSIGHTS FROM KEY ORGANISATIONS #480 Sheree Bekker; Penny Paliadelis; Caroline Finch (Australia)

❙ UNDERSTANDING ATHLETES’ USE OF EXERCISE AND NON-EXERCISE BASED INJURY PREVENTION STRATEGIES #660 Thomas Love (United Kingdom); Camilla Knight (United Kingdom); Black Katherine (New Zealand)

SESSION 16 - KNEE I

❙ INVESTIGATION OF THE LOWER EXTREMITY STATIC POSTURES PREDICTING VALGUS COLLAPSE DURING DROP LANDING IN KOREAN MALE AND FEMALE – LOGICAL ANALYSIS OF DATA (LAD) APPROACH #793 Sae Yong Lee (South Korea); Seok Gi Lee (USA); Yuncheol Kang (South Korea); Young Min Chun (South Korea); Chang-Young Kim (South Korea); In Deok Kong (South Korea)

❙ IS MOVEMENT OF LOWER EXTREMITY DURING SPORTS MANEUVERS SIMILAR? #530 Yukio Urabe; Moriyama Nobuaki; Morita Miho; Suzuki Yuta; Maeda Noriaki (Japan)

74 Thematic Posters

❙ KINEMATIC ANALYSIS OF PRESSING MOVEMENTS IN WOMEN’S SOCCER COMPETITIONS #836 Shogo Sasaki (Japan); Hideyuki Koga (Japan); Tron Krosshaug (Norway); Toru Fukubayashi (Japan) ❙ KNEE VALGUS ANGLE AND LOADING ACROSS COMMON ATHLETIC TASKS; REFERENCE VALUES AND GENDER DIFFERENCES IN A HEALTHY POPULATION #896 Faisal Alenezi (United Kingdom/Saudi Arabia); Lee Herrington (Saudi Arabia); Paul Jones (Saudi Arabia); Richard Jones (Saudi Arabia) ❙ MECHANISMS OF ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT INJURIES IN HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETES #458 Saeko Takahashi; Yasuharu Nagano; Wataru Ito; Toru Okuwaki (Japan)

❙ MECHANISMS OF ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT INJURIES IN VOLLEYBALL #602 Yukiko Karita; Yuka Kimura; Yuji Yamamoto; Takuya Naraoka; Shizuka Sasaki; Kazutomo Miura; Eiichi Tsuda; Yasuyuki Ishibashi (Japan) ❙ NEUROMUSCULAR TRAINING EFFECTS ON THE STIFFNESS PROPERTIES OF THE KNEE JOINT AND LANDING BIOMECHANICS OF YOUNG FEMALE RECREATIONAL ATHLETES #656 Dan Wang (Ireland/China); Giuseppe De Vito (Ireland); Massimiliano Ditroilo (Ireland); Eamonn Delahunt (Ireland) ❙ PREVENTION OF ACL INJURIES IN OLYMPIC SPORTS – FIRST STEPS FOR A NATIONAL "ACL REGISTRY IN FOOTBALL" #794 Werner Krutsch; Christian Gündisch; Michael Nerlich; Peter Angele (Germany)

SESSION 17 - KNEE II

❙ ALLOMETRICALLY SCALED H:Q RATIOS: TIME TO SHARPEN OUR VISION CONCERNING STRENGTH RATIOS AS INJURY RISK FACTOR! #661 Rafeeuddin Radin (United Kingdom); Raihana Sharir (United Kingdom); Mark Robinson (United Kingdom); Keith George (United Kingdom); Greg Atkinson (United Kingdom); Lorenzo Lolli (United Kingdom); Matt Konopinski (United Kingdom); Jos Vanrenterghem (Belgium) ❙ DYNAMIC TAPING AND HIGH FRONTAL PLANE KNEE PROJECTION ANGLE IN FEMALE VOLLEYBALL ATHLETES #699 Natalia Bittencourt; Marcela Leite; Alysson Zuin; Marina Pereira; Gabriela Gonçalves; Silvanio Signoretti (Brazil) ❙ HAMSTRING/QUADRICEPS RATIO IN ACL INJURY PREDICTION IN ELITE FOOTBALL PLAYERS #719 Monika Grygorowicz; Martyna Michalowska; Tomasz Walczak; Jakub Grabski; Andrzej Pyda; Tomasz Piontek (Poland)

❙ IMPLICIT AND EXPLICIT VIDEO FEEDBACK ON LANDING MECHANICS: A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL #700 Nelson Cortes (USA); Tijana Popovic (USA); Oladipo Eddo (USA); Anne Benjaminse (The Netherlands); Amanda Caswell (USA); Shane Caswell (USA)

75 Thematic Posters

❙ OVERTRAINING AS A RISK FACTOR FOR ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT RUPTURE IN FEMALE BASKETBALL PLAYERS #871 Tamara Stojmenovic; Tatjana Malic; Milica Vukasinovic-Vesic; Marija Andjelkovic; Nenad Dikic (Serbia)

❙ THE EFFECT OF FUNCTIONAL FATIGUE ON KNEE FORCE SENSE IN UNINJURED ADULT MALE FOOTBALL PLAYERS #617 Nicholas Clark; Mark Rolleston (United Kingdom)

❙ THE FRONTAL PLANE KNEE PROJECTION ANGLE IN ELITE MALE VOLLEYBALL ATHLETES IS INCREASED AFTER AN INCREMENTAL SHUTTLE RUN TEST UNTIL VOLUNTARY FATIGUE #846 Luciana Mendonça; Natália Bittencourt; Davidson Silva; Luciano Prado (Brazil)

❙ WEAK LOWER EXTREMITY MUSCLE STRENGTH IS A RISK FACTOR FOR TRAUMATIC KNEE INJURY IN YOUTH FEMALE ATHLETES #471 Sofi a Ryman Augustsson; Eva Ageberg (Sweden)

SESSION 18 - KNEE III

❙ ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT INJURY: IDENTIFYING INFORMATION SOURCES AND LEVEL OF RISK FACTOR RECOGNITION AMONG THE GENERAL PUBLIC #517 Yasuharu Nagano; Yako-Suketomo Hiroko; Natsui Hiroaki (Japan)

❙ EFFECTIVENESS OF ECCENTRIC HIP ABDUCTION EXERCISE ON KNEE ABDUCTION MOMENT FOR ONE-YEAR FOLLOW-UP #415 Yasuaki Okawa; Yasuaki Saho; Kana Iwano; Sayaka Yasui (Japan)

❙ EXERCISE-BASED KNEE INJURY PREVENTION CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINES #572 Amelia Arundale (USA); Mario Bizzini (Switzerland); Airelle Giordano (USA); Joseph Godges (USA); Timothy Hewett (USA); David Logerstedt (USA); Bert Mandelbaum (USA); David Scalzitti (USA); Hollly Silvers-Granelli (USA); Lynn Snyder-Mackler (USA)

❙ INJURY PREVENTION THROUGH EXTERNAL SENSOMOTORIC SUPPORT? #864 Jürgen Herfert; Yvonne Landkammer; Robert Sassmann; Sebastian Edtinger; Angelika Moder; Anton Wicker (Austria)

❙ LOWER LEG BIOMECHANICS ASYMMETRIES DURING LANDING AFTER ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT RECONSTRUCTION #570 Yuka Kimura; Yuji Yamamoto; Takuya Naraoka; Yukiko Karita; Eiichi Tsuda; Yasuyuki Ishibashi; Misato Makino (Japan)

❙ PAINFUL EVALUATION AND INJURY PREVENTION OF LOWER EXTREMITY THROUGH CYCLING DIAGNOSIS SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT: COMPUTATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL APPROACHES #420 Penny Wen; Bing-Shiang Yang (China)

❙ PEAK PLANTAR FORCE IN ELITE SOCCER PLAYERS FOLLOWING ACL RECONSTRUCTION: GREATER SYMMETRY AFTER 9 MONTHS WHEN RUNNING #634 Athol Thomson (Qatar/United Kingdom); Rod Whiteley (Qatar); Einar Einarsson (Qatar); Chris Bleakley (United Kingdom)

76 Thematic Posters

❙ TIBIOFEMORAL LATERAL COMPARTMENT’S MORPHOLOGY AS A RISK FACTOR: A RADIOGRAPHIC COMPARISON BETWEEN ACL-RUPTURED AND NON-INJURED SUBJECTS #766 Renato Andrade (Portugal); Sebastiano Vasta (Italy); Rogério Pereira (Portugal); Ana Leal (Portugal); Luís Silva (Portugal); Cátia Saavedra (Portugal); Ricardo Bastos (Portugal); Rui Rocha (Portugal); Alberto Monteiro (Portugal); Nuno Sevivas (Portugal); Rocco Papalia (Italy); João Espregueira-Mendes (Portugal)

SESSION 19 - METHODOLOGY FOR INJURY SURVEILLANCE

❙ A MULTIDISCIPLINARY SPORTS MEDICINE PERFORMANCE MODEL IN ELITE WOMEN'S INTERNATIONAL SOCCER #505 Stephen Boyce; Oliver Davies; Michael McKenna; Andrew White; Mark Dixon; Niall Elliott (United Kingdom)

❙ DEVELOPMENT OF A NEW SMART SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM FOR MONITORING SPORTS INJURIES #463 Mohsen Sadeghi; Mohammad Hossein Alizadeh (Iran)

❙ EPIDEMIOLOGICAL INJURY SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM DURING MAJOR ATHLETICS CHAMPIONSHIPS: WHAT IS THE METHODOLOGICAL QUALITY? #511 Pascal Edouard (France); Pedro Branco (Switzerland); Juan-Manuel Alonso (Qatar); Astrid Junge (Switzerland/Germany)

❙ GERMAN TRANSLATION AND CONTENT VALIDATION OF THE OSTRC QUESTIONNAIRE ON OVERUSE INJURIES AND HEALTH PROBLEMS #680 Anja Hirschmüller (Germany/Switzerland); Kathrin Steffen (Norway); Katharina Fassbender (Germany); Ben Clarsen (Norway); Reiner Leonhard (Germany); Lukas Konstantinidis (Germany); Norbert P Südkamp (Germany); Eva Johanna Kubosch (Germany)

❙ IMPLEMENTATION OF AN INJURY AND ILLNESS SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM IN PARALYMPIC ATHLETES (ISSPA) - A STUDY IN GERMAN PARACYCLING ATHLETES #455 Eva Johanna Kubosch (Germany); Katharina Fassbender (Germany); Kathrin Steffen (Norway); Nobert Südkamp (Germany); Anja Hirschmüller (Germany)

❙ INJURY SURVEILLANCE IN COMMUNITY AUSTRALIAN RULES FOOTBALL USING SMS TECHNOLOGY AND ONLINE SURVEYS #943 Laura M Schwab (Australia)

❙ LOOKING BEYOND RECURRENCE; CURRENT METHODS FOR REPORTING MULTIPLE INDIVIDUAL INJURY IN STUDIES OF TEAM BALL SPORTS #646 Lauren Fortington (Australia); Henk van der Worp (The Netherlands); Inge van den Akker-Scheek (The Netherlands); Caroline Finch (Australia)

❙ USING MOBILE DEVICES TO MONITOR HEALTH AND WELLBEING, IN AND OUT OF COMPETITION, IN ELITE INTERNATIONAL WOMENS SOCCER #508 Stephen Boyce; Andrew White; Michael McKenna; Mark Dixon; Oliver Davies; Niall Elliott (United Kingdom)

77 Thematic Posters

SESSION 20 - MOVEMENT QUALITY SCREENING TESTS

❙ APPRAISAL OF THE FUNCTIONAL MOVEMENT SCREEN IN FOOTBALL INJURY PREDICTION #717 Monika Grygorowicz; Martyna Michalowska; Tomasz Piontek (Poland)

❙ FUNCTIONAL MOVEMENT SCREEN AND LOWER LIMB STRENGTH ASYMMETRY IN PROFESSIONAL SOCCER PLAYERS #488 Italo Sannicandro; Giacomo Cofano; Anna Rosa Rosa; Paolo Trafi cante; Andrea Piccinno (Italy)

❙ IT’S NOT ‘WHO’ BUT ‘HOW BADLY’: THE ASSOCIATION OF FUNCTIONAL MOVEMENT SCREEN SCORE WITH INJURY OUTCOME IN COMMUNITY RUGBY UNION #590 Matt Attwood; Simon Roberts; Grant Trewartha; Mike England; Keith Stokes (United Kingdom)

❙ PREDICTING LOWER EXTREMITY INJURY RISK IN SPORT THROUGH MOVEMENT QUALITY SCREENING: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW #452 Jackie Whittaker (Canada); Sarah de la Motte (USA); Liz Dennett (Canada); Nadine Booysen (United Kingdom); Cara Lewis (USA); David Wilson (United Kingdom); Carly McKay (Canada/United Kingdom); Martin Warner (United Kingdom); Darin Padua (USA); Carolyn Emery (Canada); Maria Stokes (United Kingdom)

❙ Y- BALANCE TEST SCORE COMPARISON BETWEEN PRE-SEASON AND IN-SEASON IN YOUTH ATHLETES #859 Natalia Bittencourt; Marcela Leite; Leandro Garcia; Luciana Mendonça; Ana Carolina Bithencourt; Gabriela Gonçalves (Brazil)

SESSION 21 - NON-INJURY HEALTH ISSUES

❙ ADAPTED EVALUATION PROTOCOLS FOR TEENAGE ATHLETES COMPETING AT YOUTH OLYMPIC GAMES: SAFEGUARDING AND PROTECTING YOUNG CHAMPIONS #777 Paolo Emilio Adami; Maria Rosaria Squeo; Filippo Maria Quattrini; Fernando Maria Di Paolo; Cataldo Pisicchio; Roberto Ciardo; Luisa Verdile; Stefano Caselli; Viviana Maestrini; Antonio Spataro; Antonio Pelliccia (Italy)

❙ AMETROPIA, VISUAL DEFICITS AND MOTOR PERFORMANCE IN SCHOOL SPORTS #538 Gernot Jendrusch; Vanessa Oertzen-Hagemann; Petra Platen (Germany)

❙ DEVELOPMENT OF A SKIN CANCER PREVENTION PROGRAMME FOR OUTDOOR ATHLETES #870 Nina Nachtigall; Hans Michael Ockenfels (Germany)

❙ GOOD EYESIGHT – A BASIC PRECONDITION FOR SAFETY AND PERFORMANCE IN SPORTS #539 Gernot Jendrusch; Vanessa Oertzen-Hagemann (Germany)

❙ OPTIMISING ORAL HEALTH AMONG DUTCH ELITE ATHLETES FOR RIO 2016 #576 Eppo Wolvius; Lea Kragt; Cees-Rein van den Hoogenband; Maarten Moen (The Netherlands)

78 Thematic Posters

❙ ORAL HEALTH OF UK ATHLETES AND IMPACT ON PERFORMANCE #422 Julie Gallagher (United Kingdom)

❙ SHARP - SPORTS MENTAL HEALTH AWARENESS RESEARCH PROJECT: PREVALENCE AND RISK FACTORS OF DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS AND LIFE STRESS IN ELITE ATHLETES #626 Sarah Beable; Mark Fulcher; Bruce Hamilton; Arier Chun-Lee (New Zealand)

SESSION 22 - PREVENTING RUGBY INJURIES

❙ A DOWNWARD HEAD POSTURE LEADS TO HIGHER CERVICAL SPINE LOADING DURING HEAD-FIRST IMPACTS IN SIMULATED RUGBY TACKLES #482 Elena Seminati; Ezio Preatoni; Grant Trewartha; Keith Stokes; Sean Williams; Dario Cazzola (United Kingdom)

❙ ARE EXERCISE-BASED INTERVENTIONS EFFECTIVE IN REDUCING INJURIES IN TACKLE COLLISION BALL SPORTS? A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW #589 Nicola Sewry (South Africa); Evert Verhagen (South Africa/The Netherlands); Mike Lambert (South Africa/The Netherlands); Willem Van Mechelen (South Africa/ The Netherlands); Wayne Viljoen (South Africa); Clint Redhead (South Africa); James Brown (South Africa/The Netherlands)

❙ NECK FUNCTION IN ELITE MALE RUGBY UNION PLAYERS: RESULTS FROM A PILOT FOR AN INTERVENTION STUDY #891 Bianca Zietsman; Espen Aag Holth; Peter McCarthy (United Kingdom)

❙ TACKLE DIRECTION AND DOMINANT SIDE AFFECT UPPER BODY LOADING DURING RUGBY TACKLES #484 Elena Seminati; Dario Cazzola; Ezio Preatoni; Keith Stokes; Sean Williams; Grant Trewartha (United Kingdom)

❙ THE BOKSMART SAFE SIX: FUNCTIONAL WARM-UP TO REDUCE INJURIES IN RUGBY UNION. DESIGN OF A CLUSTER RCT #416 Nicola Sewry (South Africa); Evert Verhagen (South Africa/The Netherlands); Mike Lambert (South Africa/The Netherlands); Willem van Mechelen (South Africa/ The Netherlands); James Brown (South Africa/The Netherlands)

❙ THE IMPLEMENTATION AND ADOPTION OF THE INJURY PREVENTION EXERCISE PROGRAMME GAA 15 IN GAELIC FOOTBALL CLUB TEAMS IN THE COUNTIES OF MAYO AND LONDON #754 John Reilly; Courtney Kipps (United Kingdom)

❙ THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN TACKLE COACHING METHODS AND PLAYERS’ TACKLE TRAINING ATTITUDES AND BEHAVIOURS #748 Sharief Hendricks (United Kingdom/South Africa); Lindsay Starling (South Africa); Ben Jones (United Kingdom); Kevin Till (United Kingdom); Mike Lambert (South Africa/ The Netherlands)

❙ WORKLOAD SPIKES COMBINED WITH HIGH CUMULATIVE LOAD IS ASSOCIATED WITH INCREASED INJURY RISK IN ELITE RUGBY SEVENS PLAYERS #684 Stephen West; Sean Williams; Matthew Cross; Dan Howells; Remi Mobed; Simon Kemp; Keith Stokes (United Kingdom)

79 Thematic Posters

SESSION 23 - RTP & INJURY CONSEQUENCES

❙ A STUDY ON MEDICATION USE AND INJURIES IN OVER 1500 NOVICE RUNNERS #568 Henk van der Worp (The Netherlands); Marienke van Middelkoop (The Netherlands); Fred Hartgens (The Netherlands); Bionka Huisstede (The Netherlands); Per Wilms (The Netherlands); Bas Kluitenberg (The Netherlands); Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands/ Australia/South Africa); Nadine Rasenberg (The Netherlands); Ron Diercks (The Netherlands)

❙ DECISION MAKING IN THE RETURN TO PLAY AND PREVENTION STRATEGIES – ANALYSIS OF ELITE FOOTBALL PLAYERS AND TEAM COACHES` VIEW #800 Werner Krutsch; Peter Angele; Michael Nerlich; Oliver Loose (Germany)

❙ I WAS AN ACROBAT. AM I IN PAIN? #722 Úrsula Martins; João Cunha; Lourenço França; João Amaro; Joana Gomes; Catarina Aguiar Branco (Portugal)

❙ PREVENTATIVE RISK FACTORS FOR OSTEOARTHRITIS IN GREAT BRITAIN’S OLYMPIANS #644 Dale Cooper; Mark Batt; Brigitte Scammell; Debbie Palmer-Green (United Kingdom)

❙ SUBSEQUENT ARM INJURY RISK FOLLOWING REHABILITATION AND RETURN TO SPORT #577 Ellen Shanley; Amanda Arnold; Richard Hawkins; John Tokish; Michael Kissenberth; Douglass Wyland; Charles Thigpen (USA)

❙ THE EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDY OF POST-TRAUMATIC KNEE OSTEOARTHRITIS AFTER KNEE LIGAMENT OR MENISCUS INJURIES USING NATIONAL HEALTH INSURANCE SERVICE (NHIS) 514,866 COHORT DATA: RETROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY #855 Sang Gyun Kim; So Young Lee; Young Hee Lee; Sae Yong Lee (South Korea)

❙ THE USE OF NON-STEROIDAL ANTI-INFLAMMATORIES (NSAIDs) AT THE 2016 LONDON MARATHON #658 Steven Whatmough; Stephen Mears; Courtney Kipps (United Kingdom)

❙ UNDERSTANDING HOW CLINICIANS AND ATHLETES MAKE RETURN TO PLAY DECISIONS – TOWARDS PREVENTING RE INJURIES #378 Adam Weir (Qatar); Arnlaug Wangensteen (Qatar); Andreas Serner (Qatar); Russel J. Steele (Canada); Ian Shrier (Canada)

❙ WHAT DOES RETURN TO PRE-INJURY RISK MEAN? #426 Ian Shrier; Meng Zhao; Alexandre Piché; Pavel Slavchev; Russell J. Steele (Canada)

80 Thematic Posters

SESSION 24 - RUGBY INJURY EPIDEMIOLOGY

❙ AN EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDY OF MATCH INJURIES IN YOUTH RUGBY UNION #659 Michael Hislop; Keith Stokes; Sean Williams; Simon Kemp; Mike England; Grant Trewartha (United Kingdom) ❙ AN INCREASING INCIDENCE OF INJURIES DURING THE SUPER RUGBY TOURNAMENT: A PROSPECTIVE STUDY OVER 4 YEARS INVOLVING 69 194 PLAYER- HOURS #791 Martin Schwellnus; Dina Christina Janse van Rensburg; Charl Janse van Rensburg; Esme Jordaan; Audrey Jansen van Rensburg; Wayne Derman; Clint Redhead (South Africa) ❙ ASSESSMENT OF RISK FACTORS INVOLVED WITH CONTACT AND NON-CONTACT INJURIES IN U.S. RUGBY-7s #812 Victor Lopez (USA/New Zealand); Richard Ma (USA); Meryle Weinstein (USA); Patria Hume (New Zealand); Robert Cantu (USA/Ireland); Christian Victoria (USA); Samuel Haleem (USA); Jessica Delallo (USA); Answorth Anthony Allen (USA) ❙ CATASTROPHIC INJURY INCIDENCE RATES IN SOUTH AFRICAN RUGBY UNION: ARE THERE REGIONAL DIFFERENCES? #411 Marelise Badenhorst (South Africa/The Netherlands); Evert Verhagen (South Africa/ The Netherlands); Willem van Mechelen (South Africa/The Netherlands); Mike Lambert (South Africa/The Netherlands); Wayne Viljoen (South Africa); Clint Redhead (South Africa); Gail Baerecke (South Africa); James Brown (South Africa/The Netherlands) ❙ EPIDEMIOLOGY OF INJURIES IN ENGLISH COMMUNITY LEVEL RUGBY UNION USING SMS PLAYER SELF-REPORTED DATA #466 Simon Roberts; Grant Trewartha; Mike England; Matt Attwood; Keith Stokes (United Kingdom) ❙ INJURIES IN AMERICAN YOUTH RUGBY-7s: AN EMERGING ADOLESCENT COLLISION SPORT #886 Victor Lopez, Jr (USA/New Zealand); Richard Ma (USA); Meryle Weinstein (USA); Patria Hume (New Zealand); Robert Cantu (USA/Ireland); Christian Victoria (USA); Sophie Queler (USA); Answorth Anthony Allen (USA) ❙ SINGAPORE RUGBY UNION INJURY SURVEILLANCE: HOW DO WE COMPARE TO PREVIOUS FINDINGS IN RUGBY UNION AND DO WE NEED TO IMPROVE? #753 Dinesh Sirisena; Henderson Annie (Singapore) ❙ U.S. RUGBY-7s: THE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE WITH A GROWING AMATEUR COLLISION SPORT #630 Victor Lopez, Jr (USA/New Zealand); Richard Ma (USA); Meryle Weinstein (USA); Patria Hume (New Zealand); Robert Cantu (USA/Ireland); Christian Victoria (USA); Erica Marcano (USA); Answorth Anthony Allen (USA)

81 Thematic Posters

SESSION 25 - RUNNING INJURIES

❙ A 12MM, IN-SHOE ORTHOTIC HEEL LIFT ADDED TO STANDARD RUNNING SHOES LOWERS ACHILLES TENDON LOADING #761 Simon Bartold (Australia)

❙ A COMPARISON OF CALCANEAL BONE DENSITY IN COLLEGIATE ATHLETES AND NON-ATHLETES #433 Jason Bennett (USA)

❙ DOES FOOT PRONATION CAUSE VASCULAR CONSTRICTION? #492 Evi Wezenbeek; Tine Willems; Nele Mahieu; Ine Van Caekenberghe; Dirk De Clercq; Erik Witvrouw (Belgium)

❙ PERCEPTION OF HEALTH PROBLEMS AMONG COMPETITIVE RUNNERS: QUALITATIVE STUDY OF COGNITIVE APPRAISALS AND BEHAVIOURAL RESPONSES #775 Sara Jelvegård (Sweden); Toomas Timpka (Sweden); Victor Bargoria (Sweden/Kenya); Håkan Gauffi n (Sweden); Jenny Jacobsson (Sweden)

❙ THE IMPACT OF RUNNING INJURIES IN RELATION TO OTHER REASONS FOR DISCONTINUED RUNNING IN NOVICE RUNNERS #533 Michael Lejbach Bertelsen; Sten Rasmussen; Rasmus Østergaard Nielsen (Denmark)

❙ THE IMPACT OF RUNNING LEVEL ON THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN RUNNING DISTANCE AND INJURY RISK #868 Camma Damsted (Denmark); Rasmus Østergaard Nielsen (Denmark); Laurent Malisoux (Luxembourg)

❙ THE INFLUENCE OF THE TIME SCALE USED IN TIME-TO-EVENT ANALYSES ON THE IDENTIFICATION OF TRAINING-RELATED RISK FACTORS IN RUNNING #867 Camma Damsted (Denmark); Rasmus Østergaard Nielsen (Denmark); Laurent Malisoux (Luxembourg)

❙ TRAINING TRENDS AND INJURY INCIDENCES AMONG IRISH DISTANCE RUNNERS #712 Colin Griffi n; Brendan Egan; Catherine Blake; Peter Horgan (Ireland)

❙ WHAT CHARACTERISES CHAMPION RUNNERS’ MANAGEMENT OF INJURY AND ILLNESS? QUALITATIVE STUDY AT IAAF ATHLETICS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS #771 Toomas Timpka (Sweden); Victor Bargoria (Sweden/Kenya); Karin Halje (Sweden); Jenny Jacobsson (Sweden)

82 Thematic Posters

SESSION 26 - SCREENING FOR INJURY RISK

❙ AN ASSESSMENT OF CLINICAL JOINT AND LIMB MEASURES IN PROFESSIONAL FEMALE SOCCER PLAYERS: SCREENING TOOLS FOR INJURY PREVENTION? #674 Kristian Weaver; Nicola Relph (United Kingdom)

❙ BACK PAIN RISK FACTORS IN ADOLESCENT ATHLETES: SUITABILITY OF A BIOMECHANICAL SCREENING TOOL? #631 Steffen Mueller; Juliane Mueller; Josefi ne Stoll; Tilman Engel; Frank Mayer (Germany)

❙ DECREASED AVERAGE POWER OF THE HIP EXTERNAL MUSCLES AS A RISK FACTOR FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF LOWER EXTREMITY INJURY IN WOMEN: A PROSPECTIVE STUDY #388 Ruth Verrelst (Belgium); Damien Van Tiggelen (Belgium); Roel De Ridder (Belgium); Erik Witvrouw (Qatar)

❙ FIGC TERRITORIAL CENTERS: A PILOT STUDY TO DETERMINE THE LOWER LIMB STRENGTH ASYMMETRY IN YOUNG SOCCER PLAYERS #489 Italo Sannicandro; Vito Tisci; Antonio Quarto; Giacomo Cofano; Anna Rosa Rosa (Italy)

❙ INDIVIDUAL PHYSICAL MONITORING FOR ELITE WOMEN’S INTERNATIONAL SOCCER PLAYERS: AN EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMME #503 Stephen Boyce; Oliver Davies; Michael McKenna; Andrew White; Mark Dixon; Niall Elliott (United Kingdom)

❙ MEASURES OF LIMB SYMMETRY USED FOR INJURY RISK IDENTIFICATION: WHAT IS NORMAL? #826 Scott Lawrance; Clyde Killian; Peter Rundquist; Walter Jenkins (USA)

❙ PRE-SEASON ISOKINETIC SCREENING OF NEUROMUSCULAR RISK FACTORS IN ELITE FOOTBALL #446 Rogério Pereira; Renato Andrade; Ricardo Vidal; Filipe Castanheira; Ana Leal; Cátia Saavedra; Nuno Pais; Hugo Duarte; Luís Silva; Alberto Monteiro; Nuno Loureiro; João Espregueira-Mendes (Portugal)

❙ RELIABILITY OF PHOTOGRAPHIC POSTURAL ASSESSMENT IN MALE ELITE JUNIOR SOCCER PLAYERS (UNDER 16, 17 & 19) #625 Karen Hajduk; Dietmar Schmidtbleicher (Germany)

❙ RELIABILITY, PRECISION OF MEASUREMENT AND MINIMAL DETECTABLE DIFFERENCE OF RIGHT AND LEFT KNEE EXTENSION FORCE SENSE MEASUREMENT IN UNINJURED ADULT MALE FOOTBALL PLAYERS #614 Nicholas Clark; Mark Rolleston (United Kingdom)

83 Thematic Posters

SESSION 27 - UPPER EXTREMITY

❙ HIGH PREVALENCE OF SUBSTANTIAL SHOULDER PROBLEMS AMONG ELITE ADOLESCENT HANDBALL PLAYERS: THE KAROLINSKA HANDBALL STUDY #751 Martin Asker (Sweden); Lena W Holm (Sweden/Canada); Henrik Källberg (Sweden); Markus Waldén (Sweden); Eva Skillgate (Sweden)

❙ POSSIBLE STRENGTH DEFICIT IN SHOULDER ROTATION FOR HYPERMOBILE SWIMMERS #392 Behnam Liaghat (United Kingdom/Denmark); Aki Salo (United Kingdom); Birgit Juul-Kristensen (Denmark)

❙ SHOULDER FUNCTION AND SHOULDER COMPLAINTS IN DANISH ELITE BADMINTON PLAYERS #536 Connie Linnebjerg (Denmark); Mette Zebis (Denmark); Merete Møller (Denmark); Vollaard Niels (United Kingdom)

❙ THE SELF ASSESSMENT CORNER (SAC METHOD): A NOVEL WAY TO SELF ASSESS SHOULDER ROTATOR CUFF STRENGTH: A RELIABILITY AND VALIDITY STUDY #551 Philippe Decleve; Ann Cools (Belgium)

❙ THERE’S AN APP FOR THAT: RELIABILITY OF AN IPHONE APP TO ASSESS UPPER EXTREMITY PROPRIOCEPTION AND STABILITY #735 James Lynch; Keeley Smith; Vrund Patel; Kayla Luchan (USA)

❙ THREE-DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS OF SCAPULAR KINEMATICS DURING ARM ELEVATION IN BASEBALL PLAYERS WITH SCAPULAR DYSKINESIS: COMPARISON OF DOMINANT AND NON-DOMINANT ARMS #835 Ho-Dong Yu; Jin-Young Park (South Korea)

❙ THREE-DIMENSIONAL IN-VIVO SCAPULAR KINEMATICS AND SHR: A COMPARISON BETWEEN ACTIVE AND PASSIVE MOTION #689 Doo-sup Kim (South Korea)

❙ ULTRASONOGRAPHIC CHANGES OF UPPER EXTREMITY TENDONS IN RECREATIONAL BADMINTON PLAYERS: THE EFFECT OF HAND DOMINANCE AND COMPARISON WITH CLINICAL FINDINGS #818 Jin Park; Young-Hee Lee; In Deok Kong; Tae-jun Park; Jae Seung Chang; Taeho Kim; Hi Chan Lee (South Korea)

SESSION 28 - UPPER EXTREMITY & SPINE

❙ COMPARISON OF THE GLENOID RETROVERSION BY AGE AND POSITION IN ELITE BASEBALL PLAYERS: ASSESSMENT OF 291 ELITE PLAYERS FROM JUNIORS TO PROFESSIONALS #845 Jin-Young Park; Jung-Joo Lim (South Korea)

❙ LOW BACK PAIN RISK FACTORS IN OLYMPIC CLASS SAILORS OCCUR PRE-REGATTA AND WITHIN THE REGATTA #376 Shawn Hunt; Kathryn Roach; Ira Fiebert (USA)

84 Thematic Posters

❙ SPINE DESEASE PREVENTION IN TECHNICAL SPORTS #668 Irina Zelenkova; Sergey Zotkin; Dmithry Almiashev; Dmithry Savin (Russian Federation)

❙ SPORTS-RELATED ELBOW ULNAR COLLATERAL LIGAMENT INJURY IN THE 21ST CENTURY #419 Jason Zaremski; JoAnna McClelland; Heather Vincent; Kevin Vincent; Daniel Herman; Michael Seth Smith; Bryan Prine; Kevin Farmer; Michael Moser; MaryBeth Horodyski (USA)

❙ THE EFFECTS OF FATIGUE ON SCAPULA KINEMATICS DURING THROWING IN ELITE TEAM HANDBALL PLAYERS; DOES PAIN INFLUENCE? A PRELIMINARY STUDY #798 Tina Piil Torabi (Denmark); Birgit Juul-Kristensen (Denmark/Norway); Mogens Dam (Denmark); Frederik H. Andersen (Denmark); Lasse Malchow-Møller (Denmark); Mette K Zebis (Denmark); Merete Møller (Denmark); Jesper Bencke (Denmark)

❙ THE INCIDENCE AND RISK FACTORS OF SHOULDER PAIN IN JUNIOR COMPETITIVE SWIMMERS #515 Yuta Suzuki; Yukio Urabe; Maeda Noriaki; Miho Morita; Toshiya Shima; Taizan Shirakawa (Japan)

❙ X-RAY SCAN EXAMINATION AS A QUALIFICATION TO PRACTICE JUDO - THE CERVICAL SPINE INSTABILITY AMONG CHILDREN #831 Wojciech Gawroński; Aleksandra Gawrońska; Jakub Kabata (Poland)

SESSION 29 - YOUTH & FEMALE ATHLETES

❙ A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN ADIPOSITY AND SPORT INJURY RISK IN YOUTH #548 Clodagh Toomey (Canada); Declan Patton (Canada/Australia); Jackie Whittaker (Canada); Sarah Richmond (Canada); Carolyn Emery (Canada)

❙ ASYMPTOMATIC ELITE YOUNG TENNIS PLAYERS SHOW LATERAL AND VENTRAL GROWTH PLATE ALTERATIONS OF PROXIMAL HUMERUS ON MRI #811 Fredrik Johansson (Belgium/Sweden); Eva Skilgate (Sweden); Edin Debri (Sweden); Anders Adolfsson (Sweden); Göran Jenner (Sweden); Leif Swärd (Sweden); Ann Cools (Belgium)

❙ CAN WE LIMIT TRAINING DAYS LOST DUE TO OSGOOD SCHLATTERS DISEASE IN JUNIOR SQUASH ATHLETES? #591 Cosmin Horobeanu; Thomas Jones; Amanda Johnson (Qatar)

❙ SERUM ANDROGEN PROFILE, BODY COMPOSITION AND PHYSICAL PERFORMANCE IN FEMALE OLYMPIC ATHLETES #554 Emma Berglund Lindgren; Bo Berglund; Angelica Lindén Hirschberg (Sweden)

❙ SIDE- AND AGE-SPECIFIC POSTURAL ADAPTATIONS OF MALE ELITE JUNIOR SOCCER PLAYERS (UNDER 16, 17 & 19) #663 Karen Hajduk; Dietmar Schmidtbleicher (Germany)

❙ THE IMPACT OF HEAVY MENSTRUAL BLEEDING (MENORRHAGIA) AND IRON STATUS IN EXERCISING FEMALES #720 Georgie Bruinvels (United Kingdom/Ireland); Richard J Burden (United Kingdom/Ireland); Timothy Cushway (Singapore); Nicola Brown (United Kingdom); Charles Pedlar (United Kingdom/Ireland/USA); Toby Richards (United Kingdom)

85 Workshops

#758 A journey from research to strategy: Questions, #409 Comparing Adductor Squeeze Tests: Detection answers and solutions to reduce the risk of head injury = Prevention Ross Tucker (Ireland), Martin Raftery (Ireland) Neil Light (United Kingdom), Richard Clark (United strategy for tackling head injury - map risks Kingdom) with research, then ask experts for directions. Law change & This workshop will evaluate the protocols, evidence base and education are the way. practicalities for adductor squeeze testing in an elite football club setting. #664 A new method for evaluation of sport specifi c performance and injury mechanisms within #608 Compensation and Insuffi ciencies: Moving competitions - 3D markerless motion capture Towards a Consensus for Screening Movement Quality Philipp Russ (Germany) in Athletes to Predict Injury Risk A new method of precise markerless tracking allowing research Jackie Whittaker (Canada), Anna Frohm (Sweden) and practice to understand sport performance where it really By summarizing the evidence on preseason movement quality matters - in real competitions. screens to detect injury risk this session will call for international consensus. #833 ACL Prevention: Easy to get an athlete back, but how to keep them there? #698 Continuous monitoring in team sports: follow- Miranda O'Hara (Australia), Nick Ames (Australia) up Belgian Field-Hockey team during Rio Olympics Return to sport continuum considerations in a joint compromised 2016 athlete to reduce ACL re-injury. Steven Probst (Belgium), Arne Jaspers (Belgium) Road to the Olympic fi nal: Continuous monitoring of fi tness #760 Athletic footwear in 2016. Minimalism, & well-being of Belgian fi eld hockey players during the 2016 Maximalism and futurism. What can we expect? Olympics: Case study. Simon Bartold (Australia) This workshop will equip sports medicine practitioners to #844 Decreasing the incidence of ACL injuries dispassionately evaluate current footwear trends based on through graded dampening of the visual system during merit, and allow you to make appropriate footwear choices. training Donn Dimond (USA), Matt Weissbach (USA) #865 Beating Bugs with Technology Novel approach to decreasing the incidence of ACL injuries Bill Moreau (USA), Charudutt Shah (USA) by using stroboscopic training lens to decrease visual spatial Learn how to use today’s latest technology to defeat the bugs disorientation. that bug us and our athletes. Applications of rapid diagnostic testing in the athletic arena. #723 Determining Brain Fitness to Fight: What We've Learned From Combat Sports #755 «Blink and you’ll miss it »; The utility of real-time Tad Seifert (USA), Charles Bernick (USA) video review in the identifi cation of the concussed athlete To maintain the viability of combat sports, a comprehensive Simon Kemp (United Kingdom), Martin Raftery (Ireland) neurologic evaluation of fi ghters is imperative. This workshop How practitioners can use structured video review to inform reviews the neurology of combat sports. real-time in-game decision making for head injury events. #180 Developing a movement control intervention for #297 Bodies of gods, teeth of yobs: promoting good injury reduction in collision sports: lessons from Rugby oral health in sport Union Ian Needleman (United Kingdom), Julie Gallagher (United Keith Stokes (United Kingdom), Grant Trewartha (United Kingdom) Kingdom) What causes poor oral health in athletes? Do screening and Exploring the process of developing and delivering a movement preventive interventions lead to performance improvements? control injury reduction intervention in a contact team sport We discuss practical solutions. (rugby).

#560 Bringing complexity to sports injury prevention #103 Does Core Stability have a Role in Injury research: What it is and how to do it Prevention? Sheree Bekker (Australia), Alexander M Clark (Canada) Marie-Elaine Grant (Ireland), Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands) What works, for whom, when, where, why & how? Novel Debunk myths and address key factors of the role of Core considerations for sports injury prevention research using Stability in Injury prevention for athletes. complexity theory. The evidence base, evaluation & guidelines for strengthening.

86 Workshops

#219 ECG Interpretation in Athletes #741 Get hip with injury prevention by providing a Jonathan Drezner (USA), Mathew Wilson (Qatar) correct hip screening examination. Learn the new “International Criteria” for ECG interpretation in Bill Moreau (USA), Marc Philippon (USA) athletes and how to correctly distinguish normal fi ndings from Join and learn the current hip screening techniques and strategies ECG abnormalities requiring more investigation. to prevent future hip injury in the elite athlete population. #209 Electrocardiographic Interpretation in Athletes #35 Getting athletes and coaches to adhere to our Mathew Wilson (Qatar), Jonathan Drezner (USA) preventive advices The goal of this workshop is to help clinicians distinguish Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands), Carly McKay (United normal, physiologic ECG adaptations in athletes from fi ndings Kingdom) suggestive of cardiac pathology, utilising the new ‘international Seeking to positively change athletes’ and coaches’ behavior criteria’ for ECG interpretation in athletes. to align with evidence based advices? Learn and share with us #326 Emergency action plans – The good, the bad, behavioral approaches that work. and the ugly. #601 “Get them to the start line healthy – How to Samuel Johnson (USA) prevent illness in your team” Designed to save lives – but only if enacted. Learn how sports Yorck Olaf Schumacher (Qatar), Martin Schwellnus medicine professionals can improve emergency action plan (South Africa) implementation. Learn how to implement measures to prevent illness in your #501 Endurance Exercise In Extreme Environments – team. How To Prevent Injury And Illness #421 Hamstring injury rehabilitation and prevention Stephen Boyce (United Kingdom), Andrew Murray of reinjury using lengthened state eccentric training (United Kingdom) Malachy P McHugh (USA), Timothy F Tyler (USA) Medical and individual preparation to prevent injury and illness The objective of this workshop is to highlight recent advances marathon running in extremes of temperature (cold, heat and in hamstring strain rehabilitation that have been shown to humidity). successfully reduce injury recurrences. #127 Evidenced-informed strategies for the #259 Harnessing Neurocognition for Sports prevention of chronic ankle instability following lateral Performance and Rehabilitation ankle sprain. Daniel Herman (USA), Zach Sutton (USA) Eamonn Delahunt (Ireland), Phillip Gribble (USA) - Understand the emerging role of neurocognition in sports This workshop will provide clinicians with an evidence-informed performance and injury risk overview of strategies for the prevention of chronic ankle - Understand techniques to train neurocognitive parameters. instability. #474 Hip joint stability training - not just for dancing #478 Explosive Strength Training for Injury Prevention athletes – It’s a hip thing to do! Susan Mayes (Australia) Marc Norcross (USA), Sam Johnson (USA) This interactive workshop aims to demonstrate The Australian Just focusing on maximal glut med strength? Learn how & why Ballet’s approach to improving hip joint stability with to include the glut max and explosive strength training for more proprioceptive and resistance training. effective injury prevention. #902 ‘‘How many days to the Games?’’ A case-study #413 Football injury epidemiological surveillance analysis of the psychological impact of the timing of experience: past, present and future injury and recovery across the Olympic Quadrennial. Karim Chamari (Qatar), Mokhtar Chaabane (Qatar) Tadhg MacIntyre (Ireland), Jessie Barr (Ireland) Soccer: 8 years "injury and illness surveillance program": Our transdisciplinary workshop will uniquely explore how the Creation from scratch and management with evolution from timing of injury across the Olympic cycle can determine the hard copies to digitized data collection. adverse psychological consequences of injury. #432 From Paper to Practice - Developing and #295 How Olympic Weightlifting is raising the bar on implementing sports injury prevention interventions Nations’ well-being that make a difference Davy Snowdon (United Kingdom), Stewart Cruikshank Alex Donaldson (Australia), Katherine Snedaker (USA) (United Kingdom) We will demonstrate a model to help develop, implement & Interactive and highly entertaining, learn how Olympic evaluate sports injury prevention interventions to max adoption weightlifting is eliminating MSDs; benefi tting industry and & overall impact. society in general.

87 Workshops

#275 How to conduct your sports injury study on #796 Mirror mirror on the wall…which is the most modifi able risk factors with low risk of bias. Karolinska appropriate statistical method of them all?: Correct Handball Study - a practical example statistical approaches for evaluating prevention Lena Holm (Sweden), Martin Asker (Sweden) strategies The workshop includes considerations, obstacles - solutions, Luz Palacios-Derfl ingher (Canada), Alberto Nettel-Aguirre and how to avoid pitfalls when conducting studies on risk (Canada) factors for injuries. Learn correct statistical approaches to use, based on objective and type of data. Overview of basic analysis to different #571 How to prevent recurrence of hamstring muscle regression models. injury Rod Whiteley (Qatar), Bruce Forster (Canada) #610 Modern protection equipment in Olympic sports This workshop will highlight how sports medicine professionals - Better injury prevention and earlier return to play?! can assess proven risk factors for hamstring strain recurrence Werner Krutsch (Germany), Karlheinz Waibel (Germany), and MRI in returning injured athletes safely to sport. Hartmut Semsch (Germany) #470 How to spot snake oil and snake oil salesmen: Prevention of injuries, protection wear/equipment, Olympic combining evidence and practice to make a quality sports, practical course, change of experiences. decision on injury prevention #841 Optimizing load for injury prevention. The 3 Ms: Clare Ardern (Sweden/Australia), Alan McCall (United Managing load, Maximizing performance, Minimizing Kingdom) injury. Join us to learn how to spot bogus claims and unravel confusion, Nicola Phillips (The Netherlands/United Kingdom), Phil to make quality decisions for injury prevention. Glasgow (The Netherlands/Switzerland), Mario Bizzini #547 How to use systematic reviews to inform quality (The Netherlands/Switzerland) decision making for injury prevention Exercise prescription: balancing load progression to facilitate Clare Ardern (Sweden/Australia), Adam Weir (Qatar/The RTP and enhance capacity of tissue to cope with increased challenge. Netherlands) Beware! Injury prevention systematic reviews: all that glitters is #669 Orienting biomechanics research for sports not gold. We will explain why. injury prevention. #817 How understanding the mechanism of all Andrew McIntosh (Australia),Tron Krosshaug (Norway) musculoskeletal injuries is required for injury prevention Join us to help set the agenda for biomechanics research in sports injury prevention in Monaco. Geoffrey Verrall (Australia) Mechanism of MSK injuries allows determination of injury #834 Orthopedic bracing applications: Learn three etiology. Understanding this allows us to be precise with rehab taping techniques in 45 minutes or less. and prevention. Emma Jonsson (USA) #371 Injury prevention in Olympic style boxing — Come prepared to tape and to be taped! I will teach you three past, present and future taping techniques (ankle, knee, and shoulder) that are fast and effective. Jahnavi Dande (India), Anirban Mallick (India) Rule changes in Olympic boxing and impact on medical #545 Oxidative stress and Overtraining Syndrome outcomes - Epidemiological monitoring of boxing injuries, future Davide Susta (Ireland), Oleg Glazachev (Russian directions for injury prevention. Federation) #435 Innovative Injury Prevention Strategy: Using Is there any role for intermittent hypoxia-hyperoxia training in Breathing Exercises to Restore Motor Control the battle between reactive oxygen species and antioxidant defenses? Masafumi Terada (Japan), Ryoko Shiroma (Japan) This workshop will discuss a potential injury prevention strategy #573 Peeking behind the curtain; how to use that maximizes the sensorimotor control with breathing qualitative approaches to develop optimized care and exercises. prevention for athletes #253 Making Sense of Concussion in Aquatic Sports Evert Verhagen (The Netherlands), Caroline Bolling (The James Miller (USA), Cees-Rein Van Den Hoogenband Netherlands) (The Netherlands) Familiarize yourself with qualitative study approaches to achieve Concussion recognition and return to sport - unique challenges practical answers to contemporary sports medicine questions. in Aquatic Sports.

88 Workshops

#843 Practical Sideline Management of Dental and #873 Proprioception Measurement in Knee Injury Orofacial Injuries for the Sport Physician Prevention and Rehabilitation: Where Existing Tests Paul Piccininni (Canada), Anthony Clough (United Kingdom) Are Failing and Why We’re Missing the Target A practical review of the diagnosis and management of common Nicholas Clark (United Kingdom) sport dental injuries including lacerations, luxations, avulsions, Examines critical concepts, constructs, and future directions fractures and jaw dislocations. for proprioception measurement in knee injury prevention and rehabilitation. #120 Predicting the Future: The Development of the WTA Tennis Specifi c Screen. #757 “Quicker, more skilful, more spectacular” – Belinda Smith (Australia), Jodie Dakic (Australia) Rugby Sevens - How to deliver an injury prevention One size does not fi t all: the WTA introduce research on injury programme in a performance focussed environment trends in professional tennis, their custom designed tennis Simon Kemp (United Kingdom), Jo Larkin (United specifi c screen and associated prediction of injury risk. Kingdom) #84 Preseason assessment in athletes: how to plan How Sports Medicine and Sports Science can collaborate to preventive interventions? optimise performance and maximise player availability in elite Rugby 7’s. Luciana Mendonça (Brazil), Natália Bittencourt (Brazil) How to use clinical reasoning to plan preseason assessment and #629 Recovery, an effective tool for injury prevention establish parameters in order to apply preventive interventions. in team sports. Where is its limit? #250 Preventing Back Pain in Gymnasts Javier Peña López (Spain), Albert Altarriba Bartés (Spain) Emily Stuart (USA) Recovery is an important issue in team sports. Our workshop goal is to present and discuss methods verifi ed by current The speaker will provide evidence-based strengthening and scientifi c research. fl exibility strategies for preventing common causes of back pain in gymnasts. #616 Reducing Injury Risk In Elite Female Soccer #502 Preventing hamstring muscle injuries by sprint Stephen Boyce (United Kingdom), Oliver Davies (United acceleration performance evaluation: What? How? Kingdom) When? Strategies to reduce injury risk through multidisciplinary team working and education of players. Pascal Edouard (France), Jean Benoît Morin (France) To present a win-win strategy between sprint acceleration #514 Reducing the Risk of Concussions in Young performance and hamstring injury prevention, based on Athletes by Implementing Evidence-Based Principles: innovative sprint biomechanics concepts. What Is the Winning Blueprint? #557 Prevention and Rehabilitation in Sports 2.0 Brooke de Lench (USA), James MacDonald (USA) Sven Friese (Germany) A concussion education pioneer & a sports medical doctor An understanding of how to apply lower extremity exercises provide ways to improve safety by adopting their proven risk effi ciently in rehabilitation and prevention for athletes will be management programs. given. #456 Return to sport after ACL reconstruction: What #293 Prevention of Concussion in sport: Cervical to know? What to do? spine and Vestibular considerations Bart Dingenen (Belgium), Alli Gokeler (The Netherlands) Kathryn Schneider (Canada), Geoff Schneider (Canada) How to apply current research on return to sport decision Cervical spine and vestibular involvement in the primary, making and secondary ACL injury prevention training within secondary and tertiary prevention of concussions in sport: An clinical practice? evidence based applied and practical session. #627 Risky business – can screening help us make #156 Prevention of illness and injury in golf, a new quality return to sport decisions. Olympic sport Nicol van Dyk (Qatar), Clare Ardern (Sweden) Andrew Murray (United Kingdom), Roger Hawkes (United Risky business: what's the difference between risk factors and Kingdom) injury risk? How does this relate to return to play? Preventing illness/injury in golf, a new Olympic sport, with #525 Self-taping techniques for sport injury prevention Andrew Murray and Roger Hawkes, who will outline how to Maria António Castro (Portugal), José Esteves (Portugal) maximise performance and prevent illness and injury. Demonstration and practice of self-taping techniques that can be used for preventing most common sports injuries of the ankle, fi ngers, thumbs, knee and leg.

89 Workshops

#889 Sport psychiatry from perspective Traditional #582 The future is here and it is digital – are you Chinese Medicine (TCM) prepared? How to make social media and digital tools Li Jing Zhu (China) work for you? Overview of sport psychiatry from aspect of West medicine Nirmala Perera (Australia), Karen Litzy (USA) according to DSM V (APA, 2013); Further presentation from Overcoming time and space: harness the power of social media perspective of TCM, such as depressive disorder, versus, for connectivity, collaboration and our common goal to prevent Yü Zheng (郁症); Dialogue between West and East! injury and illness in sport. #745 Sport with boundaries Prevention sexual #729 The menstrual cycle infl uence on performance violence in sport using the ‘Flag system’ parameters Tine Vertommen (Belgium), Kristine De Martelaer Patricia Doyle-Baker (Canada), Constance Lebrun (Canada) (Belgium/The Netherlands) Energy utilization is infl uenced by MC hormones. Understanding Green, Yellow, Red or Black Flag: Preventing sexual abuse in substrate reliance can impact training parameters, injury sport using the Flag system. prevention and performance outcomes. #685 Stepping up Clinical Evaluation Tools: A novel #36 The Overhead Athlete: Fatigue & Injury Prevention method for assessing dynamic knee stability during a Gretchen Oliver (USA), Hillary Plummer (USA) single leg squat. Examine the effects of fatigue on overhead throwing mechanics. Identify pathomechanics and explore evidence-based exercises Kerith Aginsky (Israel/South Africa), Maya Cale-Benzoor targeting these mechanics. (Israel) Novel assessment of dynamic knee stability and assessment of #279 The Past, Present, and Future of Medical muscle balance based on the use of PhysiMax real-time cloud- Records in the Prevention Injury and Illness in Athletes: based technology for injury prevention. The Team USA Model. Bill Moreau (USA), Dustin Nabhan (USA) Swimming faster by training harder; an #710 Electronic health records – can EHR crack the code of prevention experience of a novel screening programme in elite and performance? swimmers Jon Greenwell (United Kingdom), James Hull (United #825 The role of equipment design & innovation in Kingdom) injury prevention and management - lessons from team The incidence of respiratory problems in swimmers is 70%. GB Rio 2016 We will describe our novel approach to complete airway Lucy Follett (United Kingdom), Caroline Lander (United management to maintain health. Kingdom), Ash Wallace (United Kingdom) Applied methodologies pioneered by the EIS’s Performance #104 Taping and Bracing: Do they have a Role in Innovation Athlete Health team to understand and rapidly Injury Prevention? impact athlete health and performance in new and novel ways. Marie-Elaine Grant (Ireland) Choice of tapes and braces are often decided by personal #708 “To screen or not to screen” - musculoskeletal preference or anecdote, participants will be given rationale for screening tests that make sense application based on researched evidence. Andrea Mosler (Qatar), Nicol van Dyk (Qatar) There’s no ideal MSK screening but it adds clinical value. Nicol #832 The compliance conundrum: How can we van Dyk and Andrea Mosler will provide an honest and practical improve compliance in the world of injury prevention? look at useful screening tests. Holly Silvers-Granelli (USA), Mario Bizzini (Switzerland) Ultrasound Measurement of Subcutaneous Compliance is paramount with respect to injury prevention #559 program effi cacy. How can we enhance compliance amongst Adipose Tissue in Elite Athletes teams to keep players safer? Wolfram Müller (Austria), Alfred Fürhapter-Rieger (Austria), Tim Ackland (Australia), Jorunn Kaiander- #443 The Elite Overhead Athlete’s Shoulder: Sundgot-Borgen (Norway), Timothy G. Lohman (USA), Balancing on the Continuum between Performance Ronald J. Maughan (United Kingdom), Nanna L. Meyer and Pathology (USA) Stijn Bogaerts (Belgium), Styn Vereecken (Belgium) Body composition is an important health and performance factor. Evidence based clinical decision making towards kinematic Standardized B-mode ultrasound measures subcutaneous fat variability of the elite overhead athlete shoulder. thickness with highest accuracy.

90 Workshops

#276 Unique Aspects of the Periodic Health Evaluation #491 What does a multiscale modelling approach for Injury and Illness Prevention in Paralympic Athletes: add to the analysis of injury mechanisms in sport A Case-Based Discussion impacts? The quest for valid measures and the missing Cheri Blauwet (USA), Bill Moreau (USA) knowledge This session will provide an analysis of PHE data for Paralympic Ezio Preatoni (United Kingdom), Dario Cazzola (United athletes, outlining unique risk factors and associated case Kingdom) studies. Can we assess external loading & internal stresses in contact events? Discussing an integrated analysis of impact events in #633 Upper Extremity Examarama Rugby Union. Mark Hutchinson (USA), Bill Moreau (USA), Ann Cools (Belgium), Babette Pluim (The Netherlands), Juan Manuel #97 What is "(de)hydration" and how can we best Alonso (Qatar) monitor it? Cased-based, interactive, small group workshop designed to Tamara Hew-Butler (USA), Joseph Verbalis (USA) optimize UE diagnosis & exam skills & share global experience We will defi ne and discuss (de)hydration from the perspective of among participants. a variety of measurement techniques utilized to promote “fl uid balance”. #263 Using a novel tennis stroke effi ciency rating to determine performance and injury risk: Is it how you hit a ball, or how much? #87 What psychological techniques work in injury Neeru Jayanthi (USA), Marc Kovacs (USA) prevention? Practical solutions and strategies. The speakers will present a novel stroke effi ciency rating system Ulrika Tranaeus (Sweden), Andreas Ivarsson (Sweden) in tennis players for injury and performance evaluation. Main strategies used in successful psychological based studies for injury prevention: Think less, be present and focus on adequate behaviors.

91 List of Speakers

Eva Ageberg, PhD, PT, Associate professor Stephania Bell, PT, OCS, CSCS Department of Health Sciences ESPN Injury Analyst, Sr Writer Faculty of Medicine Jesper Bencke, PhD Lund University Laboratory of Human Movement Analysis PO Box 157 Dep. of Orthopaedic Surgery 22100 Copenhagen University Hospital, Amager-Hvidovre Lund, Sweden 2650 Hvidovre, Denmark Osman Ahmed, Dr Anne Benjaminse, PhD, PT BSc (Hons), PGDip (Sports Physiotherapy), PhD Center for Human Movement Sciences Faculty of Health and Social Sciences University Medical Center Groningen Bournemouth University University of Groningen Christchurch Road & School of Sport Studies, Bournemouth, BH1 3LT Hanze University of Applied Sciences, United Kingdom Groningen, The Netherlands Thor Einar Andersen, MD, PT, PhD, Associate Professor Tone Bere, PT PhD Consultant in Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine & Sports Oslo University Hospital, Ullevaal Medicine Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center Department of Orthopaedics Norwegian School of Sport Sciences Kirkeveien 166 Oslo, Norway 0407 Oslo, Norway Stig H. Andersson, PT MSc PhD-student Michael F. Bergeron, PhD, FACSM, President & CEO Oslo Sport Trauma Research Center, Norwegian School of Sport Youth Sports of the Americas Sciences 500 Offi ce Park Drive, Suite 200 Department of Sports Medicine Birmingham, Alabama, 35223 USA Box 4014 Ullevål Stadion Mario Bizzini, PT PhD Research Associate Oslo, Norway FIFA Medical Research and Assessment Center (F-MARC) Paul Ashley, BDS FDS PhD Dr Schulthess Clinic Centre for Oral Health and Performance Lengghalde 2 University College London, Eastman Dental Institute Zürich, CH-8008, Switzerland 256 Gray’s Inn Road Cheri Blauwet, BS MD London WC1X 8LD, UK Chairperson, IPC Medical Committee Irfan M. Asif, MD Instructor of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and Sports Vice Chair, Department of Family Medicine Medicine, Harvard Medical School Director, Sports Medicine Fellowship Attending Physician, Brigham and Women’s Hospital Sports 877 W Faris Road Medicine Service University of South Carolina Greenville Boston, USA Greenville, SC 29605 – USA Claire Bower, MSc, MA, Dip DigM Martin Asker, Naprapath MSc PhD-student Marketing and Communications Manager (Imperial College Musculoskeletal & Sports Injury Epidemiology Centre Business School) Institute of Environmental Medicine Imperial College London Karolinska Institutet South Kensington Campus Box 210, 171 77 London SW7 2AZ Stockholm, Sweden Senior Associate Editor (BJSM) Roald Bahr, MD PhD Professor Previously: Digital Communications Manager (BMJ) - 2009-2015 Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center & Norwegian Olympic Isaac Carlson, BPhEd Training Center, Oslo, Norway Injury Prevention Portfolio Manager – Sport & Aspetar Orthopaedic & Sports Medicine Hospital, Doha, Qatar Accident Compensation Corporation Arnhild Bakken, MSc Physiotherapist PO Box 242 Aspetar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital Wellington, NEW ZEALAND PO Box 29222, Doha, Qatar Cindy J. Chang, MD Jochen Baumeister, PhD Professor Associate Clinical Professor Professor of Human Movement & Exercise Science Departments of Orthopaedics and Family & Community Department of Exercise & Health Medicine Faculty of Sciences University of California, University of Paderborn Co-Director, UCSF Benioff Childrens Hospital Sports Warburger Str. 100 Concussion Program 33098 Paderborn, Germany Team Physician, University of California, Berkeley

92 List of Speakers

Ben Clarsen, PT PhD Lars Engebretsen, MD PhD Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center Professor & Head of Medicine & Science Department of Sports Medicine, International Olympic Committee, Lausanne, Switzerland; Norwegian School of Sport Sciences Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center, Oslo University Hospital PO Box 4014 Ullevål Stadion & Norwegian Olympic Training Center, Oslo, Norway 0806 Oslo, Norway Kari Fasting, PhD, Professor emerita Jill Cook, PhD, BAppSci (Phty) Professor Department of Social and Cultural Studies La Trobe Sport and Exercise Medicine Research Centre Norwegian School of Sport Sciences La Trobe University Box 4014, Ullevål Stadion 3086, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia 0806 Oslo, Norway Ann Cools, PT, PhD Caroline Finch, PhD Professor Ghent University Robert HT Smith Personal Chair in Sports Injury Prevention Department of Rehabilitation Sciences and Physiotherapy NHMRC Principal Research Fellow Gent, Belgium Director, Australian Centre for Research into Injury in Sport and its Prevention Michel Coppieters, PT, PhD, Professor School of Health Sciences MOVE Research Institute Amsterdam Federation University Australia Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences Peter Fowler, PhD Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Research Scientist (Performance Recovery) The Netherlands Aspetar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital Wayne Derman, MBChB, PhD FFIMS PO Box 29222, Doha, Qatar Member, IPC Medical Committee Mark Fulcher, MD MMedSci Director, Institute of Sport & Exercise Medicine Medical Director, New Zealand Football Co-Director IOC Research Centre South Africa Sport and Exercise Physician, Axis Sports Medicine Specialists University of Stellenbosch Auckland, New Zealand Stellenbosch, South Africa Tim Gabbett, PhD Sean Docking, PhD Gabbett Performance Solutions, La Trobe Sport and Exercise Medicine Research Centre Brisbane, Australia La Trobe University Julie Gallagher, BDS MSc Dentist and post graduate 3086, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia research student Alex Donaldson, PhD Senior Research Fellow Centre for Oral Health and Performance Australian Centre for Research into Injury in Sport and its University College London, Eastman Dental Institute Prevention (ACRISP) 256 Gray’s Inn Road Federation University Australia London WC1X 8LD PO Box 663 UK Ballarat, Victoria 3353, Australia Laurence Gant MB,BS DA FRCS FRCEM DipSEM Jonathan Drezner, MD Academy and Development Squad Doctor Professor, Department of Family Medicine Tottenham Hotspur Football Club Director, Center for Sports Cardiology Hotspur Way, Enfi eld, EN2 9AP Team Physician, Seattle Seahawks and UW Huskies Consultant in Emergency Medicine University of Washington, Seattle, USA Homerton University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Homerton Row Hackney London Jiri Dvorak, MD E9 6SR Professor of Neurology, Schulthess Clinic Zurich, Matthias Gilgien, Ass. Prof. PhD Dept of Neurology, Swiss Concussion center, Switzerland Department of Physical Performance Guri Ekås, MD (Orthopaedic surgeon) Norwegian School of Sports Sciences Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Oslo University Hospital Postboks 4014 Ullevål Stadion, 0806 Oslo, Norway Oslo Sports Trauma Research Centre (OSTRC) Hege Grindem, PT PhD Sognsveien 220 Norwegian Research Center for Active Rehabilitation, 0840 Oslo, Department of Sports Medicine, Norway Norwegian School of Sport Sciences Carolyn Emery, PT PhD Professor Postboks 4014 Ullevål Stadion, Sport Injury Prevention Research Centre, Faculty of Kinesiology 0806 Oslo, Norway Departments of Paediatrics and Community Health Sciences Kevin Guskiewicz, ATC PhD Professor Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute Department of Exercise and Sport Science Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary University of North Carolina 2500 University Dr. NW, Calgary, Alberta, T2N1N4, Canada Chapel Hill, NC 27599

93 List of Speakers

Brent Hagel, PhD Amanda Johnson, PhD MCSP Departments of Paediatrics and Community Health Sciences Lead Physiotherapist Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute Aspire Health Centre Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary NSMP, Aspetar Alberta Children’s Hospital Simon Kemp, MB BS FFSEM Sports Physician 2888 Shaganappi Trail NW, Calgary, Alberta T3B 6A8, Canada Chief Medical Offi cer Martin Hägglund, RPT PhD Associate Professor Football Research Group Twickenham Department of Medical and Health Sciences, Division of London TW2 7BA England Physiotherapy Karim Khan, MD, PhD, MBA, Professor Linköping University University of British Columbia, Linköping, S-581 83, Sweden Vancouver, Canada Kimberly G. Harmon, MD & Editor in Chief, BJSM Professor, Department of Family Medicine Hideyuki Koga, MD PhD Junior Associate Professor and Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine Department of Joint Surgery and Sports Medicine, Tokyo Box 354060, University of Washington Medical and Dental University Seattle, WA 98195 – USA 1-5-45 Yushima, Bunkyo-ku Tokyo, 113-8519 Japan Joar Harøy, PT MSc PhD-student Mark Kovacs PhD FACSM Prof Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center Department of Sport Health Science Life University Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, Oslo, Norway 2500 Dallas Hwy SW Ste 202-141Marietta, GA 30064 USA Katja Heinemeier, PhD Associate Professor Josef Kröll, PhD Department of Biomedical Sciences University of Salzburg Centre for Healthy Aging, Faculty of Health and Medical Department of Sport Science and Kinesiology Sciences Schlossallee 49, 5400 Hallein, Austria University of Copenhagen, and Institute of Sports Medicine Copenhagen Tron Krosshaug, PhD Bispebjerg Hospital Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center Building 8, 1. Floor Norwegian School of Sport Sciences Bispebjerg Bakke 23 0806 Oslo, Norway 2400 Copenhagen NV Tricia Leahy, Denmark CEO-Hong Kong Sports Institute, Per Hölmich, MD, DMSc, Professor Hong Kong, China Head of Research, Consultant Jeremy Lewis PhD PT FCSP, Professor IOC Research Centre Copenhagen Consultant Physiotherapist Sports Orthopedic Research Center - Copenhagen (SORC-C) School of Health and Social Work, University of Hertfordshire, Arthroscopic Center, Department of Orthopedic Surgery UK Copenhagen University Hospital, Amager-Hvidovre, Denmark Clinical Therapies, University of Limerick, Ireland Sports Groin Pain Center, Aspetar Orthopaedic Central London Community Healthcare NHS Trust, UK and Sports Medicine Hospital, Doha, Qatar Centre for Health & Human Performance, London, UK Ollie Jay, PhD, FACSM, Hanna Lindblom, RPT MSc Director - Thermal Ergonomics Laboratory Department of Medical and Health Sciences, Division of Exercise & Sports Science, Faculty of Health Sciences, Physiotherapy University of Sydney Linköping University 75 East Street Linköping, S-581 83, Sweden Lidcombe, NSW, 2141, Australia Adrian Lussi, DDS PhD Professor Neeru Jayanthi, M.D. Department of Preventive, Restorative and Pediatric Dentistry Associate Professor Orthopedics and Family Medicine University of Berne Director, Tennis Medicine Freiburgstrasse 7 Associate Director, Primary Care Sports Medicine Fellowship CH-3010 Bern Emory Sports Medicine Center, Atlanta, GA USA Michael Makdissi, MBBS PhD President, Society for Tennis Medicine and Science (STMS) Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, Melbourne Manikavasagam Jegathesan, Brain Centre Pro Chancellor, Universiti Sains Malaysia (Austin Campus) Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia 3084 Chairman of the Medical Commissions of the Olympic Council of La Trobe Sport and Exercise Medicine Research Centre Asia and the Commonwealth Games Federation La Trobe University Melbourne, Victoria, Australia 3086

94 List of Speakers

Kathy Martin, M.Couns. B.A. B.App.Sci(Physio). Andrea Mosler, MAppSc (Sports Physio) G.Dip.Adol.Hlth&Welf. Aspetar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital WTA Senior Director, Athlete Assistance, Florida, USA PO Box 29222, Doha, Qatar ITF Player Welfare Offi cer, London, United Kingdom Margo Lynn Mountjoy, MD, PhD, CCFP, FCFP, Andrew McIntosh, PhD Adjunct Professor FACSM, Dip Sport Med. Australian Collaboration for Research into Injury in Sports and Associate Clinical Professor, McMaster University of School its Prevention (ACRISP), of Medicine, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; IOC Medical Federation University Australia Commission-Games Group; FINA Bureau - Sports Medicine Director, McIntosh Consultancy and Research Erich Müller, PhD Professor Australia Department of Sport Science Vice Rector for Teaching Carly McKay, PhD University of Salzburg Department for Health Salzburg, Austria University of Bath Takeshi Muneta MD PhD Professor Claverton Down, Bath Department of Joint Surgery and Sports Medicine BA2 7AY United Kingdom Graduate School of Medical Science, Tokyo Medical and Dental James McNeil, University University Emeritus Professor Chief of Knee and Sports Medicine Physics Department Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Tokyo Medical and Dental Colorado School of Mines University Hospital Golden, CO 80401, USA Natalie L. Myers MS, ATC, PES Shoulder Center of Kentucky Chris Milne, MBChB FACSP FRNZCGP Sports Lexington Clinic and Exercise Physician 1221 South Broadway Anglesea Sports Medicine Lexington, KY 40504 PO Box 228 USA Hamilton, New Zealand 3240 Grethe Myklebust, PT, PhD Professor Cam Mitchell, Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center Community Director Department of Sport Medicine New Zealand Football Norwegian School of Sport Sciences PO Box 301-043 PO Box 4014 Ullevål Stadion Albany, Auckland, New Zealand Oslo, N-0806, Norway Robin Mitchell, BSc (Hons) MBBS President Ian Needleman, FDS PhD Professor Centre for Oral Health and Performance Oceanic National Olympic Committees University College London, Eastman Dental Institute 73 Gordon St 256 Gray’s Inn Road Suva, Fiji London WC1X 8LD Kam-Ming Mok, PhD UK Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology David Opar, PhD Faculty of Medicine School of Exercise Science, Faculty of Health Sciences, The Chinese University of Hong Kong Australian Catholic University, Hong Kong, China Melbourne, Australia Håvard Moksnes, PT PhD Kati Pasanen, PT PhD Norwegian School of Sports Science Research Center of Sports Medicine, UKK Institute Norwegian Olympic Centre FI-33501 Tampere, Finland Sognsveien 288 0840 Oslo Jon Patricios, MD Norway Director, Sports Concussion South Africa Extraordinary lecturer Section of Sports Medicine, University of Merete Möller, PT, MHSC PhD-student Pretoria, South Africa Aarhus University, Honorary lecturer, Department of Emergency Medicine, Department of Public Health, Section of Sports Science University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa Box 8000 PO Box 1267 Aarhus, Denmark Parklands Johannesburg Christine Holm Moseid, MD PhD candidate South Africa Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center Julien Périard, PhD, Head of Research Operations Department of Sports Medicine Athlete Health and Performance Research Centre Norwegian School of Sport Sciences Aspetar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital PO BOX 4014 Ullevaal Stadion PO Box 29222 0806 Oslo, Norway Doha, Qatar

95 List of Speakers

Babette Pluim, MD PhD Chief Medical Adviser Romain Seil, MD PhD, Professor Royal Netherlands Lawn Tennis Association (KNLTB) Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Centre Hospitalier Displayweg 4 Luxembourg-Clinique d´Eich Amersfoort 3821 BT, Netherlands and Sports Medicine Research Laboratory, Luxembourg Institute of Health Margot Putukian, MD, FACSM 78, Rue d'Eich Director of Athletic Medicine, Head Team Physician, Princeton L-1460 Luxembourg University Sanjay Sharma, MD Assistant Director of Medical Services, University Health Professor, Department of Cardiovascular Sciences Services, Director of Inherited Cardiac Diseases and Sports Cardiology Assoc Clin Professor, Rutgers - Robert Wood Johnson St. George’s University of London University Health Services, Washington Rd, Princeton, NJ 08544 London SW17 0RE – United Kingdom Team Physician, US Soccer, US Men’s National Soccer Team Anthony Shield, PhD, Senior lecturer Sebastien Racinais, PhD, FECSS School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, Head of Athlete Health and Performance Research Centre, Queensland University of Technology, Aspetar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital Brisbane, Australia PoBx 29222, Doha, Qatar Ian Shrier, MD, PhD Centre for Clinical Epidemiology Gustaaf Reurink, MD Lady Davis Institute, Jewish General Hospital, McGill University Sports Physicians Group Sint Lucas Andreas Hospital, 3755 Cote Ste Catherine Amsterdam, Netherlands Montreal, QC H3T 1E2 Dr. Ebonie Rio Canada La Trobe University Sport and Exercise Medicine Centre, Christopher Skazalski, PT, DPT, ATC The Australian Centre for Research into Injury in Sport and its Aspetar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital Prevention PO Box 29222, Doha, Qatar Kristian Samuelsson, Dr MD, PhD, MSc Torbjørn Soligard, PhD Department of Orthopaedic Surgery International Olympic Committee Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg Château de Vidy 1007 Lausanne, Switzerland Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Molndal SE-431 80 Molndal Jörg Spörri, PhD University of Salzburg Irving Scher, PhD, PE Department of Sport Science and Kinesiology Guidance Engineering and Schlossallee 49, 5400 Hallein, Austria Applied Biomechanics Laboratory Sophie Steenstrup, PT MSc University of Washington Department of Sports Medicine 205 NE Northlake Way, Suite 100 Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center, Norwegian School of Seattle, Washington 98105 Sports Sciences USA Postboks 4014 Ullevål Stadion, 0806 Oslo, Norway Kathryn Schneider, PT PhD Assistant Professor Kathrin Steffen, PhD Sport Injury Prevention Research Centre, University of Calgary Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center 2500 University Dr. NW, Calgary, Alberta, T2N1N4 Norwegian School of Sport Sciences Canada 0806 Oslo, Norway Martin Schwellnus, MBBCh, MSc (Med), MD, FACSM, Charles Buz Swanik, PhD, ATC, FNATA FFIMS, Professor Director, Biomechanics & Movement Science Program Professor of Sport and Exercise Medicine Professor, University of Delaware Dept. of Kinesiology and Applied Physiology Director: Institute for Sport, Exercise Medicine and Lifestyle Human Performance Laboratory Research 541 South College Avenue Faculty of Health Sciences Newark, DE, USA University of Pretoria, South Africa Stephen Targett, MB ChB Sports Medicine Physician Dr Director: IOC Research Centre Medical Coordinator for Athlete Screening Director: FIFA Medical Centre of Excellence Aspetar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital Hazel Screen, CEng MIMechE MIPEM Professor PO Box 29222 Doha, Qatar Institute of Bioengineering Kristian Thorborg, PT, PhD, Associate Professor Queen Mary University of London IOC Sports Medicine Copenhagen Mile End Road Sports Orthopedic Research Center – Copenhagen (SORC-C) LONDON E1 4NS Department of Orthopedic Surgery United Kingdom Copenhagen University Hospital, Hvidovre, Denmark

96 List of Speakers

Eiichi Tsuda, MD PhD Professor Håvard Visnes, MD PhD, PT Department of Rehabilitation Medicine 1Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center Hirosaki University Graduate School of Medicine 2Haukeland University Hospital, Orthopedic Surgery 5 Zaifu-cho, Hirosaki 036-8562, Japan Department of Sports Medicine Ross Tucker, Norwegian School of Sport Sciences Department of Medicine PO BOX 4014 Ullevaal Stadion University of the Free State 0806 Oslo, Norway Bloemfontein, South Africa Markus Waldén, MD PhD Michael Turner, MBBS FFSEM Dr Orthopaedic Surgeon & Senior Researcher Lawn Tennis Association Department of Orthopaedics, 100 Priory Lane Hässleholm-Kristianstad-Ystad Hospitals, Hässleholm London SW15 5JQ & Division of Community Medicine, United Kingdom Department of Medical and Health Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden Peter Van de Vliet, PhD Medical & Scientifi c Director, International Paralympic Committee Nick Webborn, MB, BS, FFSEM, FACSM, FISM, Honorary Research Associate Professor School of Human Clinical Professor (Sport & Exercise Medicine) Movement and Nutrition Sciences, University of Queensland Member, IPC Medical Committee Bonn, Germany Clinical Professor of Sport & Exercise Medicine, University of Brighton Nicol van Dyk, PT, MSc, Mr. Centre for Sport and Exercise Science and Medicine (SESAME) Rehabilitation Department, Aspetar Orthopaedic and Sports Brighton, UK Medicine Hospital, Doha, Qatar Rod Whiteley, PT, PhD Aspetar Sports Medicine Hospital Willem van Mechelen, MD PhD FACSM FECSS Doha, Qatar Professor of occupational and sports medicine Amsterdam Collaboration on Health & Safety in Sports Erik Witvrouw, PT, PhD Dept of Public and Occupational Health Department of Rehabilitation Sciences and Physiotherapy, VU University Medical Center Faculty of Medicine and health science van der Boechorststraat 7 Ghent University, Gent, Belgium 1081BT, Amsterdam, Netherlands Mette Kreutzfeldt Zebis, PhD Evert Verhagen, PhD Dep. of Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy Amsterdam Collaboration on Health & Safety in Sports Faculty of Health and Technology Dept of Public and Occupational Health Metropolitan University College, Copenhagen VU University Medical Center 2200 Copenhagen N, Denmark van der Boechorststraat 7 Johannes Zwerver, MD PhD Associate Professor 1081BT, Amsterdam, Netherlands Center for Sports Medicine Wayne Viljoen, PhD. Senior Manager: Rugby Safety University Medical Center Groningen South African Rugby Union (SA Rugby) PO Box 300001 163 Uys Krige Road 9700 RB Groningen Plattekloof, 7500, Western Cape, South Africa The Netherlands

97 Patronage

Association Française de Chiropraxie

N COL A LE PE G O E R O

U F E

S P S O N R A T I S IC S AN Y D PH EXERCISE E.C.O.S.E.P.

98 Patronage

p n S o a r

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M l e d i c a

99 Scientifi c Information

Publication of Abstracts Abstracts of papers presented at the IOC World Conference on Prevention of Injury & Illness in Sport are published in a special issue of the British Journal of Sports Medicine to coincide with the Conference and focusing on sports injury prevention. All attendees will receive a copy on site.

Presentation Submission Instructions (keynotes, symposia, workshops, free communications) All presentations will be run from a central computer using PowerPoint only. Speakers & Presenters will not be able to use their own laptop. PowerPoint presentations can be viewed and tested by the Speakers & the Presenters in the Speaker's Preview Room, located in room Apollinaire at level –2 of the Grimaldi Forum. Final presentations must be uploaded on the network the day preceding their presentation (for a morning session) or, at the latest, in the morning preceding their presentation (for an afternoon session). It is essential for the smooth running of the sessions that all speakers hand in their PowerPoint presentations in due time. The Apollinaire room will be open from Wednesday, 15 March at 16:00 with the technical team available. The following days, the room will be open from 7:30 to 19:30

Presentation technical requirements Supported media for transferring the presentations: • USB storage device, DVDROM, CDROM, Memory card.

Confi guration Windows XP / Vista / 7, Microsoft Offi ce 2013 or previous version, Windows Media Player 11 or previous version.

Supported fi le formats • PowerPoint (PPT, PPTX). For performance reason, the total size of your presentation and external fi les associated, must not exceed 1,5 Gb.

Slides formats The required format for slides is 16:9. Please note that no Olympic rings should appear on your slides.

Posters The allocated poster board space is a maximum size of 150 cm height and 90 cm base and should be large enough to be viewed at a distance of 2 meters. The Authors are responsible for the printing of their poster in advance. No on-site facilities for poster printing will be provided. All posters will be displayed in the exhibition area Diaghilev of the Grimaldi Forum (level –1), where working lunches and coffee breaks will also be served during the Conference. Posters can be set up by the Author(s) on 15 March 2017 from 16:00 until 18:30 and on 16 March 2017 from 08:00 to 9:00. A number will be assigned to each poster. Each poster will have to be hung on the poster board space matching this number. A thematic poster discussion session will be organised on 17 March 2017 from 15:30 to 16:30.

100 Scientifi c Information

Poster displays will grouped according to topic, and during this hour, authors will be asked to give a 3-min oral presentation of their study in front of their poster, followed by questions and discussion. The thematic poster discussion sessions will be led by moderators. The posters will remain on display throughout the duration of the Conference. After the end of the Conference, on 18 March 2017 at 17:00, all the posters not yet removed will be destroyed.

Workshops Please plan your workshop lasting exactly 50 minutes, and allow ample time for an interactive session with questions and discussion. You will need to upload your presentation in the Speaker's Preview Room (room Apollinaire, level -2).

WI-FI User name: IOC Password: conference

Credits IOC World Conference on Prevention of Injury & Illness in Sport (16–18.03.2017) Venue: Monaco Event code: 15231 was granted 18 European CME credits (ECMEC) by the European Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (EACCME).

Certifi cate of attendance A certifi cate of attendance will be available online after the Conference. Specifi c requests of certifi cates in hardcopy have to be addressed to the Organising Partner Publi Créations [email protected]

101 General Information

Admission The participant’s name badge is provided at the registration desk. All participants are requested to wear the badge throughout the Conference. Only badge holders are admitted to the appropriate sessions, exhibition and social events according to their type of registration.

Cloakroom A cloakroom is at the disposal of participants at the entrance of the Conference (hall Diaghilev). Delegates are kindly requested not to leave their personal belongings after closing times.

Currency The currency in Monaco is Euro (€). There are a number of currency exchange desks which are open all day, including Sunday and bank holidays. Your hotel will be able to provide you with the details of your nearest currency exchange. An ATM is at disposal in the main hall of the Grimaldi Forum for cash withdrawal.

Electricity The standard voltage in Monaco is 220 V.

Insurance The Conference organisers cannot accept liability for personal injuries sustained, of for loss or damage to property belonging to Conference participants, either during or as a result of the Conference. Registration does not include insurance.

Language The offi cial language of the Conference is English. Simultaneous translation into French, will be provided for Sessions A, B & C (Room Prince Pierre, Room Camille Blanc and Room Auric) for all the duration of the Conference.

Meals Breakfast is included in the room rate at all hotels, if booked through the Organising Partner Publi-Créations. Lunches and coffee breaks will be served to the participants in the Diaghilev exhibition area of the Grimaldi Forum according to the schedule of the programme.

Bus transportation in Monaco The use of public buses in Monaco will be free of charge from 14 to 18 March included, upon presentation of your conference badge.

Secretariat desk The secretariat / registration desk, located at the entrance of the Grimaldi Forum (hall Diaghilev), will stay open throughout the Conference with the following hours: • 15/03: 16:00 - 19:30 / 16/03: 08:00 - 18:30 • 17/03: 08:00 - 19:00 / 18/03: 08:00 - 18:30

Website For any additional information, visit the Conference Website www.ioc-preventionconference.org

102 Social Media Guidelines

Introduction No recording or broadcasting witout authorisation The IOC World Conference on Prevention of Injury and Illness in We request all delegates to refrain from recording or Sport is the premier international conference for those interested reproducing audio, video or live broadcasting (for instance in sports and exercise medicine. The latest research innovations through applications such as Facebook Live or Periscope) any and developments from the pre-eminent international authorities content presented at the conference unless written permission in sports medicine are to be showcased during 16-18 March from the Scientifi c and Organisation committee has been provided. 2017 in Monaco, representing diverse range of expertise in the Collecting or distributing this content without permission is strictly fi eld of injury and illness in sport. Open science communication prohibited. is paramount for the IOC to achieve its aim of protecting athletes of all levels, research must be effectively translated into athlete Do not use property of others without permission, or management. impersonate others The Organising and Scientifi c committees of the IOC World Attendees must refrains from using the Olympic symbol, Conference on Prevention of Injury and Illness in Sport believes trademarks or other designations which would imply an that good science communication is about sharing and therefore, unauthorised association with the Conference or the IOC. They recognise the importance and benefi ts of communicating latest must also refrain from using any trademarks or designation related research fi ndings through social media. Through our various social to the IOC or to the Conference for commercial or advertising media platforms we aim to increase the speed of knowledge purposes. translation, provide 24/7 connectivity and propagate a desire for two-way conversation. We also encourage participants to Attendees use social media under their own responsibility and it use social media to exchange about the topics addressed at the is not acceptable to impersonate any third party or organisation. conference, to stimulate new ideas and to inform persons who are unable to attend the conference. We also believe that for Follow us and use the conference offi cial hashtag social media conversation to be an enjoyable experience for all We encourage all delegates to interact on social media by: the interested parties, certain basic rules should be respected. Following the conference on Twitter: @IOCprev2017 and use the These rules are described in this document. conference hashtag #IOCprev2017 to follow the latest updates and join the conversation. If you are live tweeting, please use Be nice and respectful of speakers and other participants the following format and include the session number. This Always respect the dignity and privacy of colleagues. Harassing, will allow those who are unable to attend to keep track of the intimidating, offensive, abusive, threatening, menacing or hostile conversation using the type of session and session number content communicated during the conference will not be tolerated. (available in the conference program). Data related to others, including, but not limited to, personal details and pictures, should only be posted with that party's consent. Keynote #IOCprev2017 K1 Photographs at public events, in public areas are admissible Symposiums #IOCprev2017 S4 Try to ensure your online communications refl ect openness, Workshops #IOCprev2017 W #582 responsiveness, integrity and optimism. Oral presentations #IOCprev2017 O #586 Respect the speakers’ instructions about not sharing Poster Presentation #IOCprev2017 P #598 content online Following the conference on Instagram: @iocprev2017 During the conferences, many of our speakers are likely to Share your experience sessions using conference hashtag present exciting novel research that is not yet published. ALL #IOCprev2017 conference presentations are sharable on social media by default. However, we respect the speakers’ right to explicitly Liking IOC Conference on Facebook and sharing your conference request that certain presentations, slides, or fi ndings be left out of experience: https://www.facebook.com/IOCconference/ the social media conversation and this must be respected by all Joining the dedicated LinkedIn group: delegates. It is possible that sharing of data without the speakers’ https://www.linkedin.com/groups/10306029 consent on public domain may preclude subsequent publications Please note that the IOC World Conference on Prevention of in a scholarly journal and/or compromise their scientifi c progress. Injury and Illness in Sport social media campaign is predominantly Additionally, data taken in isolation may be inappropriately based on twitter. Selected sessions will be broadcast live via interpreted and result in harmful consequences. the offi cial conference social media platforms. Please follow Social Media Opt-out policy: Speakers are responsible #IOCprev2017 for more information for providing CLEAR instructions at the beginning of each presentation to highlight any such requests. The “no tweeting” We are expecting high volumes of tweets. Please do not swamp icon [see below] can be included on slides or posters to clearly the hashtag by quote-tweeting others. Please use the retweet express that results should not be posted on twitter and/or any function, or “break the hashtag” (i.e. delete the # character) in other social media sites. your quote-tweets. Please ensure that tweets do not misrepresent presented material. Delegates are encouraged to provide context Nirmala Perera, Conference Social Media Coordinator; and actively correct misunderstandings that arise about Roald Bahr, Scientifi c Committee Chair; something they tweet. Cherine Touvet-Fahmy, IOC Medical and Scientifi c Department.

103

Social Events

Wednesday 15 March

18.30 Grimaldi Forum - Room Prince Pierre Opening Ceremony Free access upon presentation of your badge 19.00 Grimaldi Forum - Exhibition area Welcome Reception hosted by the Minister of State of the Principality of Monaco Free access upon presentation of your badge

Friday 17 March

20.00 Monaco Top Cars Collection Museum Sports Celebration Night Dresscode: informal/business attire Ticket to be purchased, places are limited

Saturday 18 March

17.45 / 18.15 Grimaldi Forum - Room Prince Pierre Closing Ceremony Free access upon presentation of your badge 20.00 Salon Belle Epoque - Hermitage Hotel Faculty Dinner By invitation

106 Exhibitors Organising Partner

74, Boulevard d’Italie - MC - 98000 Monaco - Tel.: +377 97 97 35 55 - Fax: +377 97 97 35 50 www.publicreations.com - E-mail: [email protected]