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ABSTRACT |
The use of self-report psychological assessment tools in outcomes research has become increasingly frequent, though many sports medicine providers and researchers are unfamiliar with these instruments. We conducted a systematic search of the sports medicine literature in PubMed, Scopus, SPORTDiscus, and Google Scholar of studies published on or before November 1st, 2019. Included psychological self-assessment tools were limited to those in a written self-assessment format and were used in musculoskeletal sports injury or concussion treatment outcome studies. Both pre- or post-treatment psychological assessments were included. Thirty-four assessment scales of psychological factors were utilized across 152 sports injury treatment outcomes studies. Six assessment tools were utilized in 5 or more studies and the remaining 28 were utilized in 4 or fewer studies. Many of the utilized scales have adequate assessment and reporting of internal consistency reliability, supporting further reliability and validation studies for use in sports injury treatment outcomes research. |
Key words:
Psychological factors, sports injuries, assessment tools, systematic review
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Key
Points
- Thirty-four assessment scales of psychological factors were utilized across 152 sports injury treatment outcomes studies.
- The use of psychological assessment tools in sports injury outcomes research has become increasingly common.
- Many caregivers remain unfamiliar with these tools.
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Many psychological factors influence an injured athlete’s perception of symptom severity (Domenech et al., 2014), ability to rehabilitate from injury (Levy et al., 2008), and ability to return to sport (Ardern et al., 2012). Psychological factors such a high optimism (Brewer et al., 2006; Thomee et al., 2006), self-motivation (Brewer et al., 2003), athletic self-identity (Brewer and Cornelius, 2010), and perceived social support (Brewer et al., 2003; Brewer et al., 2000) positively impact injury rehabilitation and return to sport. Alternatively, psychological factors such as high levels of kinesiophobia (Domenech et al., 2013; Kvist et al., 2005), pain catastrophizing (Domenech et al., 2014), and depressive symptoms (Galambos et al., 2005) can negatively impact sports injury treatment outcomes. With the growing body of evidence linking psychological measures to sport injury treatment outcomes, there is a need for sports medicine clinicians and researchers to familiarize themselves with psychological assessments used in the context of sports medicine injury treatment. Though the concepts are often intuitive, sports medicine providers may be unfamiliar with assessment tools used to measure psychological factors. This lack of familiarity makes it difficult to critically assess new literature in this area or to employ the assessment tools in practice. Self-report measures are advantageous in that they are simple to administer and are the most common method used to assess psychological factors in sports medicine literature. However, it is first essential to confirm that the tool has adequate internal consistency (a measure of internal reliability) prior to performing further validation studies (John and Soto, 2007) or utilizing the tool in a clinical context. The primary aim of this review is to identify all self-report psychological assessment tools and specific psychological traits investigated in sports-related musculoskeletal injury or concussion treatment outcomes studies reported in the English literature. A secondary aim is to identify the proportion of these assessment tools with adequate internal consistency, which can be utilized as a starting point for evaluation since it is a single, consistently reported reliability metric.
A systematic search was performed with reporting of results per PRISMA guidelines (Figure 1)(Moher et al., 2009). A search of relevant studies published from 1950 (earliest indexed article that met our search terms) to November 1st, 2019 was initially performed on PubMed. Initial PubMed MESH terms used were ([psychological outcomes] OR [psychological measures]) AND ([sports medicine] OR [sports injury] OR [ACL] OR [knee] OR [ankle] OR [shoulder] OR [back] OR [hip] OR [elbow] OR [concussion]) which yielded 2759 human studies reported in English. Searches were then performed in Google Scholar, Scopus, and SPORTDiscus as well as review of citations used in relevant studies to identify an additional 119 studies (n = 878 total). The searches were performed independently by two authors with review of all discrepant selections by a third author. Studies were reviewed for predetermined inclusion criteria, including report of a sports injury treatment outcomes study, use of a self-report psychological assessment tool before and/or after injury treatment, and a requirement of publication in English in a peer-reviewed journal (Table 1). The database searches yielded a total of 2878 studies. A total of 2612 studies were excluded due to clear failure to meet 1 or more inclusion criteria based on the content of the study title or abstract alone. The entire manuscripts of the remaining 266 studies were reviewed, resulting in exclusion of a further 114 studies. This yielded a total of 152 sports-related injury out a pre-treatment or post-treatment, self-report psychological assessment tool. For this review, a self-report assessment tool was defined as one available in paper or electronic format that is completed by the patient with or without supervision of clinical staff. None of the included psychological assessment tools required completion by an individual other than the patient. Scoring could occur via manual scoring (scoring by hand) or with the use of automated scoring tools. A total of 34 unique self-report psychological tools were identified that were employed either pre-intervention or post-intervention in a musculoskeletal sports injury or concussion treatment study. After identifying all self-report psychological assessment tools, citations for the original publication describing the assessment tool, and, as available, the initial validation studies, were compiled. The validity of a scale is limited by its reliability (John and Soto, 2007); thus, it is essential to determine that a scale is reliable before determining validity. A key measure of reliability for self-report measures is internal consistency; often reported as Cronbach’s alpha, this is a measure of the correlation between different items within the same assessment tool. A higher value implies that individual items in a scale or subscale are measuring the same psychological trait. The recommended minimum value for Cronbach’s alpha is 0.70 (Bland and Altman, 1997; DeVellis, 2016; Nunnally and Bernstein, 1994), and the number of assessment tools with internal consistency (both in whole and all subscales) above 0.70 and 0.80 were determined. Results were organized by 1) psychological traits that generally have a “positive” influence on treatment outcomes into categories based on the factors or traits being assessed including personality traits (n = 2 tools); self-motivation (n = 3); coping strategies (n = 2); perceived social support (n = 2); athletic self-identity (n = 1); and optimism and self-efficacy (n = 5), 2) traits that have “negative” influence on outcomes including fear-avoidance of pain or movement (n = 5 tools); psychological distress (n = 5); and depressed mood (n = 8), as well as 3) general measures of mental-health related quality of life (n = 2). Finally, the most commonly utilized self-report psychological assessment tools, defined as those that were utilized in more than 5 sports medicine injury outcomes studies, were identified and summarized.
A total of 34 distinct self-report psychological assessment tools used across 152 studies were identified within the sports medicine literature pertaining to treatment of concussions or injuries of the shoulder, elbow, knee, hip, ankle, or foot. The median number of items per scale was 20 (range: 4 to 567, lengths of each individual assessment tool are listed in Table 2). Assessments of psychological traits that generally have a “positive” influence on treatment outcomes (n =15 tools) included personality traits (n =2 tools); self-motivation (n = 3); coping strategies (n = 2); perceived social support (n = 2); athletic self-identity (n = 1); and optimism and self-efficacy (n = 5). Assessments of psychological traits that have a “negative” influence on outcomes (n = 17 tools) including fear-avoidance of pain or movement (n = 4 tools). Finally, two self-report psychological assessment tools for general mental-health related quality of life were identified. Internal consistency was reported for the whole scale and all subscales of 31 of 34 (91%) assessment tools. The three assessment tools without demonstrated internal consistency of all or part of the assessment tool are the Psychovitality Scale (no data reported) (Gobbi and Francisco, 2006), the Emotional Responses of Athletes to Injury Questionnaire (ERAIQ) (no data reported)(Smith et al., 1990), and the ACL deficiency Quality of Life scale (ACL-QoL) (no data reported for subscales; total scale internal consistency reported as α = 0.93)(Mohtadi, 1998). Of the 34 assessment tools, 28 (82%) met the cutoff of α ≥ 0.70 for adequate internal consistency of both the whole scale and each subscale (12 tools (35%) had an α between 0.70-0.79 and 16 tools (47%) had an α ≥ 0.80). Three assessment tools with adequate reporting of internal consistency failed to meet a minimum internal consistency of α = 0.70 for the total scale or one or more subscales; these included the Sports Injury Rehabilitation Beliefs Survey (SIRBS) severity subscale (α = 0.52) (Taylor and May, 1996), the Illness Perception Questionnaire- Revised (IPQ-R) (subscales α = 0.67-0.89) (Moss-Morris et al., 2002), and the Swedish universities Scales of Personality (SSP) social desirability subscale (α = 0.59) (Gustavsson et al., 2000). Six psychological assessment tools have been utilized in 5 or more sports injury treatment outcome studies: the Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS) (Sullivan et al., 1995), Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK) (Huang et al., 2019; Kori et al., 1990) and TSK-11 (Woby et al., 2005)), Sports Injury Rehabilitation Beliefs Survey (SIRBS) (Taylor and May, 1996), Beck Depression Inventory Fast Screen (BDI-FS) (Steer et al., 1999), Emotional Responses of Athletes to Injury Questionnaire (ERAIQ) (Smith et al., 1990), Short Form 36 Questionnaire Mental Health Component (SF-36 MCS) (Ware Jr and Sherbourne, 1992).
Personality traitsThe link between personality measures and sports injury treatment outcomes is not commonly investigated (Table 2). Two scales of personality trait, The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) (Hathaway and McKinley, 1940) (since revised to MMPI-2 and MMPI-2-RF)(Hathaway et al., 1989) and the Swedish Universities Scale of Personality (SSP) (Gustavsson et al., 2000) have been utilized in a sports medicine context (Swirtun and Renström, 2008; Wise et al., 1979), with internal consistency of subscales ranging from 0.59-0.92 and length ranging from 91-567 items.
Self-motivationSelf-motivation is the ability to initiate activity without the influence of others (Dishman and Ickes, 1981). Three scales, the ACL Return to Sport after Injury Scale (ACL-RSI)(Webster et al., 2008), the Self-Motivation Inventory (SMI)(Dishman and Ickes, 1981), and the Psychovitality Scale (Gobbi and Francisco, 2006) have been applied in a sports injury context(Ardern et al., 2014; Brewer et al., 2000; Gobbi and Francisco, 2006; Langford et al., 2009). (Table 2) with internal consistency ranging from 0.91-0.92 (though no internal consistency data reported for the Psychovitality Scale) and length ranging from 6-40 items.
CopingCoping refers to the strategies and mechanisms patients use in adjusting to the psychological, physical, and emotional stress related to their injury and rehabilitation (Carver, 1997). The Brief Coping Orientation to the Problem Experience inventory (Brief COPE) (Carver, 1997) and Acceptance and Action Questionnaire (AAQ) (Carver, 1997) have been applied in a sports injury context(Ardern et al., 2014; Baranoff et al., 2015; Brewer et al., 2000; Gobbi and Francisco, 2006; Langford et al., 2009; Rosenberger et al., 2009). Length ranges from 9-28 items with internal consistency ranging from 0.70-0.84.
Social supportSocial support refers to the network of assistance from others and from the patient’s environment (Sarason et al., 1987) (Table 2). The Social Support Questionnaire (SSQ) 27-item (Sarason et al., 1987), and 7-item versions (Furukawa et al., 1999)) and Social Support Inventory (SSI) (Brown et al., 1988) have been utilized in a sports injury context (Brewer and Cornelius, 2010; Brewer et al., 2003; Brewer et al., 2000; Cohen and Wills, 1985; Covassin et al., 2014). Length ranges from 7-39 items with internal consistency ranging from 0.79-0.94.
Athletic IdentityAthletic identity is the degree to which an individual identifies with the athlete role and looks to others for acknowledgement of that role (Brewer et al., 1993). The Athletic Identity Measurement Scale (AIMS) is a 7-item assessment of the degree to which being an athlete is central to a self-identity (Table 2) (Brewer and Cornelius, 2001) with an internal consistency of 0.81 and has been utilized for ACL injury research (Brewer and Cornelius, 2010).
Optimism and Self-EfficacySelf-efficacy is the extent to which people believe they are capable of performing specific behaviors in order to attain certain goals (Bandura and Ramachaudran, 1994). Self-efficacy in the context of task completion for rehabilitation, and optimism regarding treatment outcomes are important variables in the orthopedic sports medicine literature (Ardern et al., 2014; Chmielewski et al., 2011; Rosenberger et al., 2009; van Wilgen et al., 2010) with multiple measures utilized to study these two factors (Table 2). The Sports Injury Rehabilitation Beliefs Survey (SIRBS) (Taylor and May, 1996), the Knee Self-Efficacy Scale (K-SES) (Ardern et al., 2014; Thomee et al., 2006) and the Modified Self-Efficacy for Rehabilitation Outcome Scale (SER) (Waldrop et al., 2001) were identified assessment tools for self-efficacy. The Life Orientation Test Revised (LOT-R) (Scheier et al., 1994) and the Illness Perception Questionnaire Revised (IPQ-R) (Moss-Morris et al., 2002) were identified tools for intrinsic optimism. Length ranges from 10-84 items with internal consistency ranging from 0.52-0.94
Fear-avoidance response to painThe fear-avoidance response to pain is observed among patients who experience recurrent pain with particular movements or activities and then develop an exaggerated negative psychological response to pain or to the anticipation of pain (Waddell et al., 1993) which leads to kinesiophobia, an active avoidance of movement out of fear of recurrent pain or injury (Flanigan et al., 2015). Measures related to the fear-avoidance response are common in the orthopedic sports medicine literature (Table 3) (George et al., 2008; Kvist et al., 2005; Ross, 2010). The Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia 17 item (Huang et al., 2019; Kori et al., 1990) and 11 item versions (Woby et al., 2005), Fear Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ) (Waddell et al., 1993), The Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS) (Sullivan et al., 1995), Fear of Pain Questionnaire (FPQ (McNeil and Rainwater, 1998) and revised FPQ-III (McNeil and Rainwater, 1998). Length ranges from 1140 items and with internal consistency ranging from 0.76-0.92.
Psychological distressPsychological distress negatively affects post-surgical outcomes (Table 3). Distress is a broad term that has been used to describe unpleasant modes of thinking, mood disturbances, and depressive and anxiety symptoms (Ridner, 2004). Identifying psychological distress in disturbances, disturbances, and depressive and anxiety symptoms (Ridner, 2004). Identifying psychological distress in patients allows clinicians to treat underlying stressors, allowing patients to proceed with physical rehabilitation unencumbered by maladaptive psychological factors. In the orthopedic sports medicine literature, many different measures are encountered (Brewer et al., 2003; Covassin et al., 2014; Galambos et al., 2005; Langford et al., 2009; Morrey et al., 1999; Rosenberger et al., 2009). The Emotional Response of Athletes to Injury Questionnaire (ERAIQ) (Langford et al., 2009) the Surgery Stress Scale (SSS) (Rosenberger et al., 2009), The Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) (Roberti et al., 2006), The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) (Spielberger, 2010) and the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) (Derogatis and Melisaratos, 1983) were identified as tools for psychological distress. Measures ranged from 4 items to 55 items with internal consistency ranging from 0.76-0.95.
Depressed moodDepressed mood is generally associated with worse outcomes after treatment of sports injuries (Cho et al., 2015; Hiscock et al., 2015; Nota et al., 2015) (Baranoff et al., 2015; Cho et al., 2015; Galambos et al., 2005; Hiscock et al., 2015; Potter et al., 2015; Tripp et al., 2011; van Wilgen et al., 2010; Çelebi et al., 2015). A variety of depression scales exist in the sports medicine literature, with the Beck Depression Inventory Fast Screen (BDI-FS) (Vargas et al., 2015) being the most popular (Table 3). The Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) (Nota et al., 2015), the Hospital and Anxiety Depression Scale (HADS) (Zigmond and Snaith, 1983), The 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) (Kroenke et al., 2001), the Shortened Profile of Mood States (S-POMS) (Shacham, 1983), Distress Risk Assessment Method (DRAM) (Main et al., 1992) the Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS) (Lovibond and Lovibond, 1995) and the Brunel Mood Scale (BRUMS) (Terry and Lane, 2003) were identified as tools for depressed mood. Scales ranged in length from 8 to 42 items with internal consistency ranging from 0.76 to 0.90.
Health-related quality of lifeThe Medical Outcomes Study Short- Form 36 (SF-36) is a generic measure commonly used to assess health-related quality of life (Table 4). It is used to compare general health and functioning, estimate burden of disease, screen patients, and identify health benefits of interventions. Physical component scores are most responsive to treatments targeting physical symptoms, and mental components scores are most responsive to treatments that target emotional health (Ware and Gandek, 1998). Mental components scores have been utilized in the study of recurrent concussion (Guskiewicz et al., 2007). The chronic ACL deficiency Quality of Life scale (ACL-QoL) is a 31-item measure of perceived quality of life that encompasses physical and psychological characteristics related to functional ability and satisfaction (Mohtadi, 1998). Internal consistency for quality of live scores ranged from 0.90-0.93.
Psychological factors play an important role in sports injury treatment outcomes. In this review, we have identified 152 sports injury treatment outcome studies that utilized 34 distinct self-report psychological assessment tools, though only 6 assessment tools were used in 5 or more publications. Demonstration of adequate internal consistency is necessary in order to effectively determine the validity of the scale in the context of sports injury research (John and Soto, 2007), and the majority of assessment tools utilized in sports injury outcomes research have demonstrated adequate internal consistency. Survey burden and clinical applicability are also important considerations in sports injury research. As an example, comprehensive personality testing with tools utilized previously in sports injury out comes studies (the MMPI and SSP) are lengthy, and few specific personality traits have been associated with clinical outcomes (Swirtun and Renström, 2008). Self-motivation, optimism, and self-efficacy measures are associated with return to sport, rehabilitation adherence, and overall injury outcomes. In particular, these measures are useful because they help illuminate the psychologic factors that accompany orthopedic injuries, such as perceived ability and confidence in rehabilitation. For the most part, these three categories of self-report psychological assessment tools have high levels of internal consistency as well as established correlations with various orthopedic outcomes such as pain, function, and return to sports. Self-efficacy and optimism were explored by Scherzer et al. (2001) when testing the utility of goal setting and positive outlook to improve rehabilitation adherence. Each of these attributes have scales that are viable for use clinically, with different scale options consisting of around 10-20 items which would limit the time burden. For these reasons, tools that assess these attributes would be generally informative for providers during rehabilitation without adding too much time burden. However, as compared to other measures, there is less data supporting the effect of these attributes on sports treatment injury outcomes, which limits these scales somewhat. Perceived social support is a factor that has been assessed with self-report assessment tools with adequate internal reliability. Perceived social support may vary among injured athletes, both between different types of injury (Covassin et al., 2014) and among athletes with similar injuries (Brewer et al., 2003). Measurements of social support may be a useful tool for determining potential issues with rehabilitation, particularly in high risk patients. Also, athletic identity may be used as a measuring tool for outcomes and return to sport. Social support for different types of injuries is variable, and therefore should be accounted for when treating injured patients. As elucidated by Covassin et al. (2014) concussed athletes report less satisfaction with social support than athletes with orthopedic injuries. Measures of perceived social support may be a useful tool for determining potential issues with rehabilitation as it has been associated with rehabilitation adherence (Brewer et al., 2003). Measures of perceived social support may be used longitudinally to determine the effect of changing social support on rehabilitation outcomes. Despite its utility for determining high risk patients, perceived social support as an assessment tool is limited due to the relative paucity of readily available interventions for providers to recommend or pursue. If measures of perceived social support are paired with opportunities for improving social support, then this could be a potential area of effective intervention. Self-report assessment tools for coping have been utilized in the sports injury outcomes literature, have adequate internal consistency and also have been associated with post-injury and post-surgical outcomes. The AAQ in particular can serve to predict depression at 6 months post-surgery when tested early in rehabilitation after ACL reconstruction (Baranoff et al., 2015); identification of maladaptive coping strategies early in the rehabilitation process may allow for timely intervention with a sports psychologist with tools such as cognitive behavioral therapy. This can be an effective initial screening tool, as it allows for providers to determine patients coping abilities either pre-operatively or early on in rehabilitation and intervene as necessary. However, these are limited in utility after intervention due to high time burden for the Brief COPE and the AAQ’s insensitivity to change. The interplay between kinesiophobia, pain catastrophizing, and coping strategies plays an important role in recovery and return to sport for a variety of sports medicine injuries and highlights the need for reliable, valid self-report assessment tools to study what may be a complex relationship between variables that predict injury outcomes and/or return to sport. Perhaps best studied in sports medicine in the context of ACL reconstruction, fear of re-injury (kinesiophobia) is a major determinant of return to sport (Flanigan et al., 2013; Tjong et al., 2014). Patients with chronic ankle instability who are functional “non-copers” tend to also have greater kinesiophobia and fear-avoidance beliefs (Houston et al., 2014; 2015). Athletes with shoulder instability who undergo a soft tissue stabilization procedure cite kinesiophobia as a major determinant in return to sport decisions (Tjong et al., 2015); kinesiophobia plays a similar role in return to sport decisions after arthroscopic hip surgery for femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) (Tjong et al., 2016). Finally, kinesiophobia, pain catastrophizing and maladaptive coping all correlate with baseline symptoms and disability in anterior knee pain patients (Domenech et al., 2013), with reduced catastrophizing throughout treatment predicting improvement in symptoms after treatment (Domenech et al., 2014). Kinesiophobia, along with pain catastrophizing and maladaptive coping, have been shown to be associated with return to sport and disability in a variety of different sports medicine conditions. This suggests that these attributes would be particularly valuable to providers as a measuring tool for both determining high risk patients, with kinesiophobia measurements being a potential means of measuring psychological progress with rehabilitation. These measures also have a relatively low time burden, with most questionnaires being 10-20 items long. There is currently no widely accepted screening algorithm from a psychological perspective to identify injured athletes at risk for an unsatisfactory outcome. Assessment of relevant psychological variables using tools with adequate demonstrated reliability may allow sports medicine researchers to perform further validation studies in a sports injury context and allow providers to risk-stratify patients in clinical practice. Knowledge of a patient’s psychological risk for an unsatisfactory surgical outcome may facilitate individualized discussion of operative versus non-operative treatment of a sports injury. Psychological screening could help identify patients that might benefit from interventional efforts such as motivational interviewing (Knight et al., 2006) or cognitive behavioral therapy (Hofmann et al., 2012) to improve treatment outcomes. This review has several limitations. Though internal consistency is an important measure of reliability, other measures of reliability and validity are important to consider when evaluating an assessment tool for use in a clinical or research context; due to length restrictions and the large number of assessment tools identified, a comprehensive description of the psychometric properties of each assessment tool could not be provided in the current review. Though we were able to identify the most commonly utilized self-report psychological assessment tools in sports injury outcomes research, we were unable to determine which specific tools are the most predictive of outcomes in a sports-related injury setting. This limits the ability to make recommendations of which psychometric tools to use specifically, although general recommendations based on category and time burden could be explored.
Thirty-four self-report psychological assessment tools have been utilized in sports injury treatment outcome studies and are summarized in the current review. Many of the utilized scales have acceptable internal consistency, supporting further reliability and validation studies in sports injury treatment outcomes research.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
The experiments comply with the current laws of the country in which they were performed. The authors have no conflict of interest to declare. |
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AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY |
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Joshua S. Everhart |
Employment: Sports Medicine fellow, The Cleveland Clinic |
Degree: MD, MPH |
Research interests: Orthopaedic Surgery, Sports Medicine |
E-mail: everhart.52@gmail.com |
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Kristie Harris |
Employment: Postdoctoral associate, Yale University School of Medicine |
Degree: PhD |
Research interests: Health psychology |
E-mail: kristie.harris@yale.edu |
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Aaron Chafitz |
Employment: Resident physician, interventional and diagnostic radiology, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center |
Degree: MD |
Research interests: Interventional and diagnostic radiology |
E-mail: aaron.chafitz@osumc.edu |
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James C. Kirven |
Employment: Student in the College of Medicine, The Ohio State University |
Degree: BS |
Research interests: Sports medicine |
E-mail: james.kirven@osumc.edu |
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Moneer Abouljoud |
Employment: Student in the College of Medicine, The Ohio State University |
Degree: BS |
Research interests: Sports medicine |
E-mail: moneer.abouljoud@osumc.edu |
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Steven Schiele |
Employment: Student in the College of Medicine, The Ohio State University |
Degree: MA |
Research interests: Psychological factors in chronic illness, psychological outcomes of physical exercise, coping processes in chronic disease |
E-mail: steven.schiele@osumc.edu |
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Charles Emery |
Employment: Prof., Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University |
Degree: PhD |
Research interests: Behavioral medicine, psychological adjustment to chronic illness, psychological outcomes of physical exercise |
E-mail: emery.33@osu.edu |
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David C. Flanigan |
Employment: Assoc. Prof. of orthopaedics at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. |
Degree: MD |
Research interests: Orthopaedic surgery, sports medicine, cartilage restoration |
E-mail: David.flanigan@osumc.edu |
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