Does appropriate load management reduce the risk of illness and overtraining in elite athletes?
Elite athletes exposed to high training loads and saturated competition calendar
Appropriate load management (including training, competition, psychological load, and travel)
Risk of acute illness and overtraining syndrome
This IOC consensus statement provides practical guidelines for managing training and competition loads to reduce the risk of illness and overtraining in elite athletes.
The modern-day athlete participating in elite sports is exposed to high training loads and increasingly saturated competition calendar. Emerging evidence indicates that inappropriate load management is a significant risk factor for acute illness and the overtraining syndrome. The IOC convened an expert group to review the scientific evidence for the relationship of load-including rapid changes in training and competition load, competition calendar congestion, psychological load and travel-and health outcomes in sport. This paper summarises the results linking load to risk of illness and overtraining in athletes, and provides athletes, coaches and support staff with practical guidelines for appropriate load management to reduce the risk of illness and overtraining in sport. These include guidelines for prescription of training and competition load, as well as for monitoring of training, competition and psychological load, athlete well-being and illness. In the process, urgent research priorities were identified.
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Schwellnus et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d9b70a1ad561c673685085 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2016-096572
Martin Schwellnus
South African Medical Research Council
Torbjørn Soligard
U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine
Juan Manuel Alonso
Preventive Cardiology
British Journal of Sports Medicine
The University of Queensland
The University of Sydney
University of Illinois Chicago
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