Value of wearing head protection gear while playing hurling

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Abstract

One of the three national games of Ireland, hurling is a contact team sport (15 a side) played with a metre long ash stick and a small hard leather ball. Over a 12 month period, 413 players were treated for hurling-related injuries at Cork Regional Hospital. While hand and facial trauma predominate, the proportion between the two sites has changed substantially from previous reports with a reduction in the level of facial injuries. The wearing of a helmet, and optionally a supplementary faceguard, is seen to have contributed to this trend. Despite this welcome reduction in facial injuries, a certain resistance to the use of protective headgear is evident, particularly among older players. © 1995.

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Crowley, P. J., Crowley, M. J., Dardouri, H., & Condon, K. C. (1995). Value of wearing head protection gear while playing hurling. British Journal of Sports Medicine, 29(3), 191–193. https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsm.29.3.191

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