Introduction
Although highly effective in reducing musculoskeletal injuries in youth team ball sports under controlled conditions, evidence-based injury prevention training has had limited public health impact because it is not widely or properly implemented or sustained in real-world sports settings.1 2 Not engaging end-users at the individual and organisational levels to plan, develop and implement injury prevention training (or any other health promotion intervention) is an important contributor to insufficient implementation.3–5 Collaborating with end-users provides insights into the implementation context,2 6 7 helps identify and overcome implementation barriers (eg, lack of motivation and context-specificity,8–12 and creates end-user ownership in an inclusive way with all voices heard.13 Moreover, social or behavioural theories can inform intervention development to improve programme adherence.14
Although youth handball players are vulnerable to lower and upper extremity injuries,15 16 available injury prevention interventions target either lower17 18 or upper19 limbs. Furthermore, it is recommended that injury prevention training combine physical and psychological interventions,20 as psychological training also reduces the risk of injury.21 To our knowledge, there are no injury prevention programmes available for youth handball players that target both upper and lower limbs or include psychological aspects of injury.
In this context, the ‘Implementing injury Prevention training ROutines in TEams and Clubs in youth Team handball (I-PROTECT)’ project was initiated through dialogue between end-users and researchers in 2015 with the overall goal to make injury prevention training part of regular handball practice in youth handball through a series of studies. While available injury prevention training for handball players commonly has a researcher-perspective focusing on evidence-based content and poorly described end-user involvement,17–19 I-PROTECT has an ecological participatory design incorporating the perspectives of multiple stakeholders (health beneficiaries, programme deliverers, policymakers) throughout the project.7 22 The first I-PROTECT study identified the facilitators among stakeholders at multiple levels that could help embed injury prevention training in regular training routines.7 The findings suggested that context‐specific injury prevention training, incorporating both physical and psychological aspects, and accompanied by a context‐specific implementation strategy should be developed in collaboration with stakeholders.7 End-users wanted to know and understand why and how injury prevention training works. They wanted a set of age-relevant, fun, varied and handball-specific exercises to integrate within handball practice. Psychological aspects of injury prevention can include coach communication, behaviour change, and providing feedback and creating a positive and accepting training environment. End-users also emphasised the importance of strong club leadership and support from the district and national handball federations, for example, by including injury prevention training in the coach education.7 Based on the first I-PROTECT study results, the next steps included developing the I-PROTECT model, an end-user-driven implementable intervention featuring evidence-based, theory-informed and context-specific injury prevention training, and an associated implementation strategy, as described in a recent planning paper.22
This study aimed to describe the development of an injury prevention training programme specifically for youth handball players, incorporating knowledge from coaches, players and researchers/handball experts.