Prevalence of Musculoskeletal Injuries Sustained During Marine Corps Recruit Training.

Prevalence of Musculoskeletal Injuries Sustained During Marine Corps Recruit Training. Mil Med. 2019 Mar 01;184(Supplement_1):511-520 Authors: Jensen AE, Laird M, Jameson JT, Kelly KR Abstract Musculoskeletal injuries cost the U.S. Marine Corps approximately $111 million and 356,000 lost duty days annually. Information identifying the most common types of injuries and events leading to their cause would help target mitigation efforts. The purpose of this effort was to conduct an archival data review of injuries and events leading to injury during recruit training. An archival dataset of Marine recruits from 2011 to 2016 was reviewed and included 43,004 observations from 28,829 unique individuals. Injuries were classified as mild, moderate, and severe and categorized into new overuse, preexisting overuse, and traumatic. Injury classification and categorization were stratified by event in which the injury occurred. The majority of injuries were due to overuse, and the most common types were sprains, strains, iliotibial band syndrome, and stress fractures, which constituted over 40% of all injuries. Conditioning hikes were the primary event leading to injury, with 31% of all injuries occurring during this training; running claimed 12%. Most injuries sustained during basic training comprised sprains and strains. Marines who remained uninjured during basic training outperformed those who reported at least one injury on fitness tests. Thes...
Source: Military Medicine - Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Mil Med Source Type: research