Research article - (2015)14, 811 - 818 |
Symptoms of Common Mental Disorders in Professional Football (Soccer) Across Five European Countries |
Vincent Gouttebarge1,2,3,4,, Frank J.G. Backx5, Haruhito Aoki6, Gino M.M.J. Kerkhoffs2,3,4 |
Key words: Professional football, mental disorders, life events, career dissatisfaction |
Key Points |
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Design |
This study was based on a cross-sectional design involving the baseline questionnaires from an on-going observational prospective cohort study. |
Study setting and participants |
Participants were professional footballers from five European countries: Finland, France, Norway, Spain and Sweden. Inclusion criteria were: (i) being a member, as an active player, of the national players’ union from either Finland, France, Norway, Spain or Sweden. This means committing significant time to football training and competing at the highest and second highest professional football level within one of these countries; (ii) being 18 years or older; (iii) being male; and (iv) being able to read and comprehend texts fluently in either English, French or Spanish. With regard to the second aim of the study and with a preferred sample size requirement of 50 times the number of the independent variable (Woodward, |
Symptoms related to common mental disorders |
Stressors |
Procedures |
Based on the stressors and outcome measures under study, an electronic questionnaire was set up (FluidSurveysTM) in English (for Finland, Norway and Sweden), French (for France) and Spanish (for Spain). The electronic questionnaire also involved the following descriptive variables: age, length, body mass, duration of professional football career, level of play, squad position, and level of education. Information about the study was sent per email to potential participants by the national players’ unions. Players interested in participating in the study gave their informed consent and were asked to fill in their questionnaires anonymously online within two weeks, a reminder being sent two and four weeks after the first invitation. Once completed (around 15 minutes was required), the electronic questionnaires were saved automatically on a secured electronic server that was accessible only by the research team. Players participated voluntarily in the study and did not receive any reward for their participation. Official ethical approval for our ongoing prospective cohort study in 11 countries (including the five countries involved in the present study) was obtained by the board of St. Marianna University School of Medicine (Kawasaki, Japan). The present research was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki (2013). |
Statistical analysis |
All data analyses were performed using the statistical software IBM SPSS Statistics 22.0 for Windows. Analyses were conducted separately for the five countries involved in the study. In order to secure the validity of the collected data, only questionnaires sufficiently completed were eligible for analysis, which means that 50% of the scales related to our outcome measures needed to be completed. Descriptive data analyses (mean, standard deviation, frequency, range) were performed for the different variables involved in our study. Prevalence of symptoms related to CMD (distress, anxiety/depression, sleep disturbance, adverse alcohol behaviour and adverse nutrition behaviour) were calculated using the adjusted Wald method (sample size of 150 persons or less) for confidence intervals (Portney and Watkins, |
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Participants |
From a total of 3174 players who were members of one of the five national players’ unions involved, 1732 professional footballers were contacted: 475 from Finland, 168 from France, 454 from Norway, 145 from Spain and 490 from Sweden. A total of 594 players gave their written informed consent and started to complete the questionnaire. As 54 questionnaires were insufficiently completed and thus excluded from the analysis, 540 professional footballers were involved in the analyses: 121 from Finland (response rate of 25%), 81 from France (response rate of 48%), 119 from Norway (response rate of 26%), 70 from Spain (response rate of 48%) and 149 from Sweden (response rate of 30%). The flowchart of the participants’ recruitment is presented in |
Prevalence of symptoms related to common mental disorders |
Prevalence of symptoms related to CMD ranged from 11% (Spain) to 18% (Sweden) for distress, from 25% (Spain) to 43% (Norway) for anxiety/depression, from 19% (Finland) to 33% (Spain) for sleeping disturbance, from 6% (Sweden) to 17% (Finland) for adverse alcohol behaviour, and from 47% (France) to 74% (Norway) for adverse nutrition behaviour. All prevalence rates of symptoms related to CMD among professional footballers in the five European countries are presented in |
Relationships between stressors and outcome measures under study |
Results indicated that small to moderate correlations were found between stressors and symptoms related to CMD. Life events were positively associated with distress (Finland OR=1.4 95%CI 1.0-2.1; France OR=1.7 95%CI 1.2-2.5; Sweden OR=2.0 95%CI 1.3-3.2), anxiety/depression (Finland OR=1.6 95%CI 1.1-2.3), sleeping disturbance (Sweden OR=1.8 95%CI 1.2-2.7), adverse alcohol behaviour (Finland OR=1.6 95%CI 1.0-2.3; France OR=1.5 95%CI 1.1-2.1) and adverse nutrition behaviour (Finland OR=1.5 95%CI 1.0-2.3). Career dissatisfaction was positively associated with distress (Sweden OR=0.8 95%CI 0.7-1.0), anxiety/depression (Finland OR=0.8 95%CI 0.6-0.9) and adverse nutrition behaviour (France OR=0.8 95%CI 0.7-1.0). All correlations and associations between stressors and symptoms related to CMD are presented for each country in |
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Perspective of the findings |
Scientific research on the mental health of professional footballers is scarce. The original contribution made in the present study is that it is the only international study presenting the prevalence of symptoms related to CMD among professional footballers from five European countries. In 2013, the World Players’ Union (FIFPro) – representing more than 65,000 players worldwide – initiated a pilot study on the mental and psychosocial health problems among 149 professional footballers from Australia, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Scotland and United States (Gouttebarge et al., In professional, i.e. elite, athletes from other sporting disciplines, a study involving more than 2,000 young and adult French Olympic athletes showed that 17% of them reported having encountered mental problems in the past (Schaal et al., |
Strengths and limitations |
A number of potential strengths and limitations of the study should be acknowledged. Importantly, the cross-sectional analyses conducted do not allow the establishment of a causal relationship between stressors (life events and career dissatisfaction) and the outcome measures under study. Another limitation might be related to the five samples of players involved in our study; these are limited in terms of size compared to the high number of professional footballers per nationwide league, while both response rate and sample size vary from one country to another. This may limit the generalizability of our findings. In addition, the question might be raised as to why these five countries were involved in the study and not others. We strove to collaborate with other countries where possible and where our English, French or Spanish validated scales could be used (for instance England). We were able to include only five countries as other countries were not ready to participate. Professional footballers are often surveyed by FIFPro and its national players’ unions (for instance about match fixing) and it was not possible to overload players from some countries with an additional survey on such a sensitive topic. Nevertheless, we believe that the involvement of five European countries remains unique and are happy with the effort that was put into this survey by all who participated. The authors would like to emphasize how difficult it is to gather scientific information about mental health in professional football, since such a topic remains a kind of taboo. For privacy and confidentiality reasons, the procedure of participants’ recruitment was blind to the researcher. Consequently, non-response analysis could not be conducted, which is always a limitation in epidemiological studies. Mention must also be made of the different response rates between the five countries, ranging from 25% to 48%. This difference is difficult to explain as the recruitment procedure was standardized and thus the same for all countries. An additional aspect worth discussing is the potential influence of social desirability and undesirability on the report of symptoms of CMD and adverse health behaviours in our study. Because mental health is rather a taboo in professional football, one might hypothesize that the prevalence rates found in our study are likely to be underestimated. This assumption cannot be substantiated as we did not involve a measure of social desirability/undesirability in our study. However, we feel that the anonymous recruitment procedures and anonymous electronic survey, in combination with the validated scales used in our study, might have limited the influence of social desirability/undesirability. A final potential limitation worth mentioning is directed towards the screening instruments used in our study. While the Distress Screener (distress),GHQ-12 (anxiety/depression), PROMIS (sleeping disturbance) and AUDIT-C (adverse alcohol behaviours) have been used for decades in research and are nowadays validated in several languages (including the three languages used in our study, namely English, French and Spanish), the four statements used to explore adverse nutrition behaviour have not been validated in French and Spanish (simply translated). Also, professional footballers from Finland, Norway and Sweden did not complete the scales in their native language but in English. This might be seen as a limitation of our study. However, in addition to their career, many members of national players’ unions follow online education through the FIFPro academy that is given either in English, French or Spanish. Furthermore, being able to read and comprehend texts fluently in either English or French or Spanish was a clear inclusion criteria in our study. Consequently, it might be assumed that the validity of our findings has been minimally threatened. Our study might also emphasize the need for screening instruments for symptoms of CMD specifically developed for, and validated in, professional footballers, since this is still lacking today. The strengths of this study rely especially on the topic being explored in a study group that is difficult to reach, and the availability of data across five European countries. While many scientific studies have been conducted across all continents about the occurrence of musculoskeletal injuries among players, studies about mental health are lacking as it still remains a taboo in professional football. The findings of our study form a necessary step in raising the self-awareness of all stakeholders in professional football about the potential problems related to CMD among players. In addition, it should certainly empower the development of preventive and supportive measures for the players. |
Future directions |
Our epidemiological study justifies a multidisciplinary approach to the care of professional footballers, especially when a player faces life events such as lengthy periods without training or competition. In addition to the attention given to the diagnosis, potential surgery, rehabilitation programme and return to play process of injured players, the team doctor and physical therapist as well as the orthopaedic surgeon should also focus especially on potential symptoms related to CMD that might occur among professional footballers. This multidisciplinary approach might enable detection and care in an early stage of symptoms that might otherwise develop into severe mental health disorders in the long term, while also perhaps leading to better and safer sustainable return to play. Preventive and supportive measures should therefore be developed and implemented. In a recent study, young elite athletes reported that the most important perceived barriers to seeking help for CMD were stigma and the lack of documentation, i.e. information, about such a topic (Gulliver et al., |
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Our cross-sectional analyses among 540 professional footballers showed that the highest prevalence rates of symptoms related to CMD were 18% (Sweden) for distress, 43% (Norway) for anxiety/depression, 33% (Spain) for sleeping disturbance, 17% (Finland) for adverse alcohol behaviour, and 74% (Norway) for adverse nutrition behaviour. In Finland, France and Sweden, both life events and career dissatisfaction were associated with distress, anxiety/depression, adverse alcohol behaviour, and adverse nutrition behaviour. |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
The authors would like to thank the players’ unions from Finland (Jalkapallon Pelaajayhdistys Ry JPY), France (Union Nationale des Footballeurs Professionels UNFP), Norway (Norske Idrettsutøveres Sentralorganisasjon NISO), Spain (Asociación de Futbolistas Españoles AFE) and Sweden (Spelarföreningen Fotboll I Sverige SFS) for their support in the study. We are grateful to all the professional footballers who participated in the study. The authors declare that they have no competing financial, professional or personal interests that might have influenced the performance or presentation of the work described. This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors. |
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY |
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REFERENCES |
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