Consensus statement on concussion in sport: the 6th International Conference on Concussion in Sport–Amsterdam, October 2022

Jon Patricios(University of the Witwatersrand), Kathryn Schneider(University of Calgary), Jiří Dvořák(Schulthess-Klinik), Osman Hassan Ahmed(The Football Association), Cheri Blauwet(Harvard University), Robert C. Cantu(Boston University), Gavin A Davis(Cabrini Hospital), Ruben J. Echemendía(University of Missouri–Kansas City), Michael Makdissi(Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health), Mike McNamee(Swansea University), Steven P. Broglio(University of Michigan), Carolyn A. Emery(University of Calgary), Nina Feddermann‐Demont(University of Zurich), Gordon Fuller(University of Sheffield), Christopher C. Giza(Mattel Children's Hospital), Kevin M. Guskiewicz(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Brian Hainline(National Collegiate Athletic Association), Grant L. Iverson(Harvard University), Jeffrey S. Kutcher, John J. Leddy(University at Buffalo, State University of New York), David Maddocks(Perry Maddocks Trollope Lawyers), Geoffrey T. Manley(University of California, San Francisco), Michael McCrea(Medical College of Wisconsin), Laura Purcell(McMaster University), Margot Putukian, Haruhiko Sato(Seirei Social Welfare Community), Markku Tuominen, Michael S. Turner(University College London), Keith Owen Yeates(University of Calgary), Stanley A. Herring(University of Washington), Willem Meeuwisse
British Journal of Sports Medicine
June 1, 2023
Cited by 1,038Open Access
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Abstract

For over two decades, the Concussion in Sport Group has held meetings and developed five international statements on concussion in sport. This 6th statement summarises the processes and outcomes of the 6th International Conference on Concussion in Sport held in Amsterdam on 27-30 October 2022 and should be read in conjunction with the (1) methodology paper that outlines the consensus process in detail and (2) 10 systematic reviews that informed the conference outcomes. Over 3½ years, author groups conducted systematic reviews of predetermined priority topics relevant to concussion in sport. The format of the conference, expert panel meetings and workshops to revise or develop new clinical assessment tools, as described in the methodology paper, evolved from previous consensus meetings with several new components. Apart from this consensus statement, the conference process yielded revised tools including the Concussion Recognition Tool-6 (CRT6) and Sport Concussion Assessment Tool-6 (SCAT6, Child SCAT6), as well as a new tool, the Sport Concussion Office Assessment Tool-6 (SCOAT6, Child SCOAT6). This consensus process also integrated new features including a focus on the para athlete, the athlete's perspective, concussion-specific medical ethics and matters related to both athlete retirement and the potential long-term effects of SRC, including neurodegenerative disease. This statement summarises evidence-informed principles of concussion prevention, assessment and management, and emphasises those areas requiring more research.


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