4.2 Article

Collegiate athletes opinions regarding helmet use while riding scooters or mopeds.

Journal

JOURNAL OF AMERICAN COLLEGE HEALTH
Volume 70, Issue 7, Pages 1999-2007

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/07448481.2020.1841773

Keywords

Collegiate athlete; concussion; helmet; injury prevention; NCAA; scooter or moped

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Most collegiate athletes do not wear helmets while riding scooters or mopeds, but helmet use is higher when there are coach's rules or laws in place.
Many collegiate athletes use scooters and mopeds for transportation, and they are at greater risk for head injury without helmets. Objective: Investigate college athletes' reasons for wearing/not wearing helmets while riding a scooter or moped. Participants, Methods: 125 Division I athletes across five teams (two with helmet mandates) completed a cross sectional survey on rates and attitudes about helmet use on scooters or mopeds. Results: Helmet use on mandated vs non-mandated teams was 100% vs 3.6% (OR 1141; 95% CI 56.97, 22,850). For the question, if you do not wear a helmet, what might make you change your mind and wear one?, players most commonly wrote in a law or coaches' rule (57%). Conclusions: A coach's rule is associated with a higher rate of helmet use in collegiate athletes, and athletes primarily report a rule or law as the reason they would wear a helmet on a scooter or moped.

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