[ Home ]
Company Profile Contct Us Our Products Private Label Offer
ProSpoIndia - Leading Manufacturers and Exporters of Boxing Equipment.

Preventing Childhood Sports Injuries

Children are always eager to participate in various sporting events. They try to give their best and always show more enthusiasm in what ever they do. Under these circumstances, they sometimes get hurt. What can be done about it?

Childhood sports injuries may be inevitable, but there are few things a parent can do to help prevent them:

  • Enrol your child in organized sports through schools, private clubs,        and recreation areas where there may be adults who are athletic trainers.
  • Make sure your child uses the proper protective gear for a particular sport. This may lessen the chances of being injured. Consider (PROSPO CUB) our Special ‘Custom Designed’ equipment for your child.
  • Warm-up exercises, such as stretching and light jogging, can help minimize the chance of muscle strain or other soft tissue injury during sports. Warm-up exercises make the body's tissues warmer and more flexible. Cooling-down exercises loosen the body's muscles that have tightened during exercise. Make warm-ups and cool-downs part of your child's routine before and after sports participation.
  • Take care that there are enough first-aid equipment and person available for recognition and immediate care of athletic injuries.

Treat injuries with "R.I.C.E."

If your child receives a soft tissue injury, commonly known as a sprain or a strain, or a bone injury, the best immediate treatment is easy to remember. "RICE" (Rest, Ice, Compression, and Elevation) the injury. Get professional treatment if any injury is severe. A severe injury means having an obvious fracture or dislocation of a joint, prolonged swelling, or prolonged or severe pain.

Rest

Reduce or stop using the injured area for 48 hours. If you have a leg injury, you may need to stay off of it completely.

Ice

Put an ice pack on the injured area for 20 minutes at a time, 4 to 8 times per day. Use a cold pack, ice bag, or a plastic bag filled with crushed ice that has been wrapped in a towel.

Compression

Compression of an injured ankle, knee, or wrist may help reduce the swelling. These include bandages such as elastic wraps, special boots, air casts and splints. Ask your doctor which one is best.

Elevation

Keep the injured area elevated above the level of the heart. Use a pillow to help elevate an injured limb.

Heat and Hydration

Heat-related illnesses are another type of sports injury that requires close monitoring. Children perspire less than adults and require a higher core body temperature to trigger sweating. Heat-related illnesses include dehydration (deficit in body fluids), heat exhaustion (nausea, dizziness, weakness, headache, pale and moist skin, heavy perspiration, normal or low body temperature, weak pulse, dilated pupils, disorientation, fainting spells), and heat stroke (headache, dizziness, confusion, and hot dry skin, possibly leading to vascular collapse, coma, and death). These conditions are dangerous and can even be fatal, but they can be prevented.

Don't forget to have children wear sunscreen and a hat to reduce the chance of sunburn. Sun protection may also decrease the chances of malignant melanoma - a potentially deadly skin cancer - or other skin cancers that can occur later in life. It is also very important that your child has access to water or a sports drink to stay properly hydrated while playing.

Exercise Is Beneficial

Even though children get hurt, their involvement in sports is important. Exercise may reduce his chances of obesity, which is becoming more common in children. It may also lessen his risk of diabetes, a disease that is sometimes associated with a lack of exercise and poor eating habits. Sports also helps children build social skills and provides them with a general sense of well-being. Sports participation is an important part of learning how to build team skills.

As a parent, it is important to match your child to the sport, and not push him or her too hard into an activity that he or she may not like or be capable of doing.

A Word to the Wise...

How your child can prevent sports injuries:

  • Be in proper physical condition to play the sport.
  • Know and abide by the rules of the sport.
  • Wear appropriate protective gear (for example, shin guards, a head guard, gloves, chest guards etc.).
  • Know how to use athletic equipment.
  • Always warm up before playing.
  • Avoid playing when very tired or in pain.
  • Get a preseason physical examination.
  • Make sure there is adequate water or other liquids to maintain proper hydration.

….and finally trust on ProSpo India Safety equipment.

Copyright © 20011 ProSpo®. All Rights Reserved.

Home ~ Company Profile ~ Contact Us ~ Email

  Webmaster : Web2Web Solutions