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UPCOMING SEPNZ COURSES

Please note these are the proposed courses for 2021. With the current COVID-19 situation this could also change. Once we are confirmed to go ahead registrations will be open via PNZ.

The Sporting Lower Limb

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This course is for registered physiotherapists who work with individual athletes or teams in which lower limb injury is common. The focus of the course is on pathomechanics and kinetic chain deficits as they relate to injury prevention and performance. This course is TBC for March 2022

The Sporting Upper Limb

This course will provide you with advanced skills in the assessment and rehabilitation of sporting injuries involving the upper limb. It covers pathomechanics, diagnostic imaging, initial management, rehabilitation progressions and key considerations for return to training and sport. Topics covered will include subacromial pain (e.g. swimmers shoulder); internal rotation deficits and micro‐instability (e.g. throwing/ racquet sports); dislocations/labral tears/fractures (e.g. contact sports) multi‐directional instability; common extensor tendinopathy in sport and common wrist injuries in sport. This course is TBC for May 2022

The Sporting Spine, Pelvis and Hip

This course will provide you with advanced skills in the assessment and rehabilitation of sporting injuries involving the spine, pelvis and hip. It covers normal mechanics and pathomechanics, diagnostic imaging, management, rehabilitation progressions and key considerations for return to training and sport. Topics covered will include the neck and thoracic pain in sport; the sporting spine and lumbar loading, training of the trunk musculature in athletes, the sporting hip and sports-related groin injuries. This course is TBC for Oct 2022

Injury Prevention & Performance Enhancement

This course will provide you with the key skills used in the enhancement of sporting performance and prevention of injury. It covers the analysis of physical, biomechanical and technical needs of sport, identifying key factors affecting performance and injury prevention. You will learn how to assess athletes and implement an individualised programme designed to optimise movement efficiency, performance and minimise injury risk. You will learn how to develop a sport–‐specific screening assessment, how to monitor injury rates and target injury prevention strategies within different sporting contexts. This course is TBC for November 2022

British Journal of Sports Medicine August 2021; Vol. 55, Issue 15

ORIGINAL RESEARCH

Is Physiological Equivalent Temperature (PET) a superior screening tool for heat stress risk than Wet-Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) index? Eight years of data from the Gothenburg half marathon Sofia Thorsson, David Rayner, Gunnar Palm, Fredrik Lind berg, Eric Carlstrom, Mats Börjesson, Finn Nilson, Amir K horram-Manesh, Björn Holmer Epidemiology and risk factors for heat illness: 11 years of Heat Stress Monitoring Programme data from the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour Sebastien Racinais, Marine Alhammoud, Nada Nasir, Roa ld Bahr Managing head injury risks in competitive skateboarding: what do we know? Andrew Stuart McIntosh, Declan Alexander Patton, Alexander GD McIntosh Injury epidemiology in professional ballet: a five-season prospective study of 1596 medical attention injuries and 543 time-loss injuries Adam M Mattiussi, Joseph W Shaw, Sean Williams, Phil DB Price, Derrick D Brown, Daniel Cohen, Richard Clark, Shane Kelly, Gre g Retter, Charles Pedlar, Jamie Tallent Lower step rate is associated with a higher risk of bone stress injury: a prospective study of collegiate cross country runners Stephanie A Kliethermes, Mikel R Stiffler-Joachim, Christa M Wille, Jennifer L Sanfilippo, Pedro Zavala, Bryan C Heiderscheit Injury characteristics in male youth athletics: a five-season prospective study in a full-time sports academy Daniel Martínez-Silván, Eirik Halvorsen Wik, Juan Manuel Alonso, Evan Jeanguyot, Benjamin Salcinovic, Am anda Johnson, Marco Cardinale Protecting the world’s finest athletes: periodic health evaluation practices of the top performing National Olympic Committees from the 2016 Rio or 2018 PyeongChang Olympic Games Dustin Nabhan, David Taylor, Melie Lewis, Roald Bahr

EDITORIALS

Practical tips to manage travel fatigue and jet lag in athletes Dina Christina (Christa) Janse van Rensburg, Peter Fowler, Sebastien Racinais There is no ‘Swiss Army Knife’ of thermal indices: the importance of considering ‘why?’ and ‘for whom?’ when modelling heat stress in sport Andrew Grundstein, Jennifer Vanos Hypoxic conditioning: a novel therapeutic solution for loadcompromised individuals to achieve similar exercise benefits by doing less mechanical work! Olivier Girard, Ivana Matic Girard, Peter Peeling When progressing training loads, what are the considerations for healthy and injured athletes? Tim Gabbett, Igor Sancho, Bart Dingenen, Richard W Willy Robin Hood in SEM? What can we take from elite sport to give back to wider public health? Jane S Thornton, Jon Patricios, Joanne Kemp, Lars Engebretse n, Jonathan Drezner Competing against COVID-19: have we forgotten about student-athletes’ mental health? Nicholas Grubic, Shagun Jain, Valentina Mihajlovic, Jane S Thorgnton, Amer M Johri

REVIEWS

Olympic competition climbing: the beginning of a new era—a narrative review Christoph Lutter, Thomas Tischer, Volker Rainer Schöffl How does hormone transition in transgender women change body composition, muscle strength and haemoglobin? Systematic review with a focus on the implications for sport participation Joanna Harper, Emma O'Donnell, Behzad Sorouri Khorashad, Hilary McDermott, Gemma L Witcomb Does sex affect second ACL injury risk? A systematic review with meta-nalysis Patel, Garrett S Bullock, Jordan Wrigley, Mark V Paterno, Timothy C Sell, Justin M LoscialeAkash D Aerobic performance among healthy (non-asthmatic) adults using beta2-agonists: a systematic review and meta -analysis of randomised controlled trials Amund Riiser, Trine Stensrud, Julie Stang, Lars Bo Andersen Anterior cruciate ligament injury: towards a gendered environmental approach Joanne L Parsons, Stephanie E Coen, Sheree Bekker Effects of yoga on depressive symptoms in people with mental disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis Jacinta Brinsley, Felipe Schuch, Oscar Lederman, Daniell e Girard, Matthew Smout, Maarten A Immink, Brendon Stubbs, Joseph Firth, Kade Davison, Simon Rosenbaum

http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/55/15

All articles are accessible via our website https://sportsphysiotherapy.org.nz/members/bjsm/