Evaluating Knowledge Attainment and Retention of a Multimodal Approach to Concussion Education in Collegiate Athletes

  • Scott L
  • Langdon J
  • Botnaru D
  • et al.
N/ACitations
Citations of this article
13Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Context: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has declared concussions as an epidemic in sport participation. To provide a safer environment, state legislation and athletic governing bodies have mandated concussion education as a part of concussion management strategies throughout secondary and postsecondary levels. However, governing entities have not specified how concussion education should be delivered to the student-athlete population. Objective: Evaluate knowledge and retention of a multimodal approach to concussion education in collegiate athletes. Design: Sequential explanatory mixed-methods design. Setting: Preseason meetings. Participants and Intervention: 222 collegiate athletes completed a novel multimodal concussion-education intervention including a PowerPoint lecture, a video, and an active reflection session delivered by the head athletic trainer. Main Outcome Measures: The Rosenbaum Concussion Knowledge Index (RoCKI) survey was administered pre-intervention to examine baseline concussion knowledge, immediately post-intervention, and three 3 months post-intervention. A repeated repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) compared the knowledge scores over time (pre, post, and retention surveys). Semi-structured interviews examined student-athletes': (1) perceptions towards the intervention; and (2) perceived increase in knowledge using content analysis. Results: The analysis revealed no significant changes in concussion knowledge or retention by time, F[subscript 2] = 1.95, P = 0.147, [eta][superscript 2] = 0.034. Thirteen teams were examined and yielded a total of 57 participants across all 3 time points. Ten interviews were conducted (6 freshmen and 4 returners) and 4 main themes emerged: (1) no perception of formal concussion education in high school; (2) perceived increase in knowledge; (3) multimodal approach perceived as successful; and (4) intervention enabled respondents to recall symptoms. Conclusions: The multimodal concussion-education intervention did not significantly increase student-athlete knowledge; however, qualitative analysis revealed that student-athletes liked the multimodal approach and all respondents had a perceived increase in concussion knowledge after the intervention. Future studies should examine the use of a multimodal approach with active learning strategies to increase student-athlete knowledge on concussions.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Scott, L. C., Langdon, J., Botnaru, D., & Hunt, T. N. (2021). Evaluating Knowledge Attainment and Retention of a Multimodal Approach to Concussion Education in Collegiate Athletes. Athletic Training Education Journal, 16(3), 198–207. https://doi.org/10.4085/1947-380x-20-119

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free