Negative Thinking Boosts Injury Risk

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Interesting article from Runner's World that was posted a couple of days ago online.

Runners who beat themselves up over bad performances tend to push hard when they should back off.

http://www.runnersworld.com/injury-prevention-recovery/negative-thinking-boosts-injury-risk?cid=soc_Runner's World - RunnersWorld_FBPAGE_Runner’s World__Health_News

By Cindy Kuzma Tuesday, October 6, 2015, 1:23 pm

When you have a bad run or fall short of your race goals, what sort of script runs through your mind? If you tend to fault yourself for your failures, you may face a higher risk of injury, a new study finds.

Swedish researchers analyzed 278 elite track-and-field athletes for a study published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine. Youth and adult participants alike completed a psychological survey at the beginning of the study, in 2009. For the next year, runners (or their parents, if needed) filled out web surveys about their training, reporting any new aches and pains along the way.

Over the course of a year, a whopping 71 percent of the athletes sustained an injury; of those, 97 percent were classified as overuse injuries, such as tendinitis or stress fractures. Those whose survey results showed they used a method of coping with pain called self-blame were the most likely to get hurt.

“If a runner has self-blame as a coping strategy, that runner blames him- or herself for not being tough enough during training,” says study author Toomas Timpkin, M.D., Ph.D., of Linköping University. “Self-blame may serve the athlete very well in the short term—it may be correct that the athlete really didn’t push hard enough before the competition. But the thing is that if this self-blame turns into more of a pathological negative thinking, then it becomes a problem.”

Here’s how the process likely works, he says. If a runner feels a slight twinge while training, the most effective way of responding would be to back off until the pain resolves. Most overuse injuries start with a slight inflammation that, if allowed a few days of rest or alternative training, will resolve on its own.

But runners who let self-blame run rampant tend to tune out these distress signals. “If the athlete does not have the psychological ability to adapt his or her behavior and he or she repeatedly runs through pain, the body structures also develop in a negative direction. Tendons and joints and other structures suffer,” he says.

Experts typically point to training overload—running more than the body can safely handle—as a key risk factor for overuse injuries. But when Timka and his colleagues crunched the numbers, they found self-blame replaced training load as a predictor of who would get hurt. “It’s not the training load in absolute numbers or kilometers or miles or anything—it’s training when the body needs rest that is the problem,” he says.

His research team is hard at work studying whether a similar process occurs in everyday runners as well as elites (Timka suspects it does), along with whether the underlying thought processes are conscious or happen without the athlete’s awareness. Eventually, he hopes there will be a protocol for identifying and correcting self-blame before it leads to multiple injuries, and says some athletes could likely benefit from cognitive behavioral therapy to improve their coping skills.

In the meantime, he suggests speaking with a coach, physician, or just another experienced runner to put both your athletic performances and injuries into perspective. “Discuss your reasoning about pain and injury and when to push through pain, and when not to,” he suggests. Talking through your thought process with an outsider can help you recognize when you’re not listening to your body and break negative patterns before you wind up with an extended stint on the sidelines.

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  • BZAH10
    BZAH10 Posts: 5,709 Member
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    I think this could apply to anyone who works out or plays sports regularly, not just runners. It's more a case of not being able to listen to your body and being afraid to slow down or recover from an injury. Basically sounds like what could become an exercise obsession.

    Sometimes people get so caught up in their current program and goals that they forget to look long-term and realize that aggravating and injury instead of letting it heal will only set you back even further.