
We dare to ask new questions. Are we also brave enough to change our approaches?
Author(s) -
Verhagen E.,
Bolling C.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
translational sports medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2573-8488
DOI - 10.1002/tsm2.8
Subject(s) - athletes , psychological intervention , public relations , compliance (psychology) , psychology , knowledge translation , ask price , medical education , applied psychology , medicine , political science , social psychology , physical therapy , business , computer science , knowledge management , psychiatry , finance
Over the past decades research within the field of sports medicine has yielded a large amount of evidence of the prevention and treatment of athletic injuries. Despite the availability of high quality evidence, compliance to interventions that protect athletes’ health is low. Consequently, evidence‐based programs are not achieving their optimal effect in real‐life athletic situations. Implementation and knowledge translation are the contemporary incantations to resolve this apparent gap between science and practice. This has provided us novel research questions and challenges that follow on efficacious outcomes. Most of these questions are not answered through quantifiable outcomes measures as they revolve around user behaviors. This editorial argues that if we want to know why athletes and coaches behave as they do, and what barriers there may be to changing their behavior, qualitative research can be used to give athletes and coaches a voice.