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The American Journal of Sports Medicine 31:365-373 (2003)
© 2003 American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine

Injuries in a Modern Dance Company

Effect of Comprehensive Management on Injury Incidence and Time Loss

Shaw Bronner, PT, MHS, EdM, OCS*,{dagger}, Sheyi Ojofeitimi, MPT* and Donald Rose, MD{ddagger}

* Analysis of Dance and Movement (ADAM) Center, Long Island University, Brooklyn, {ddagger} Harkness Center for Dance Injuries, Hospital for Joint Diseases, New York University Medical Center, New York, New York

{dagger} Address correspondence and reprint requests to Shaw Bronner, PT, MHS, EdM, OCS, ADAM Center, Long Island University, 122 Ashland Place, #1A, Brooklyn, NY 11201

Background: Professional dancers experience high rates of musculoskeletal injuries.

Objective: To analyze the effect of comprehensive management (case management and intervention) on injury incidence, time loss, and patterns of musculoskeletal injury in a modern dance organization.

Study Design: Retrospective/prospective cohort study.

Methods: Injury data were analyzed over a 5-year period, 2 years without intervention and 3 years with intervention, in a modern dance organization (42 dancers). The number of workers’ compensation cases and number of dance days missed because of injury were compared across a 5-year period in a factorial design.

Results: Comprehensive management significantly reduced the annual number of new workers’ compensation cases from a high of 81% to a low of 17% and decreased the number of days lost from work by 60%. The majority of new injuries occurred in younger dancers before the implementation of this program. Most injuries involved overuse of the lower extremity, similar to patterns reported in ballet companies. Benefits of comprehensive management included early and effective management of overuse problems before they became serious injuries and triage to prevent overutilization of medical services.

Conclusions: This comprehensive management program effectively decreased the incidence of new cases and lost time. Both dancers and management strongly support its continuance.




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