Preventing Little League Pitching Injuries

Preventing Youth Injuries

Preventing Youth Pitching Injuries in Little League Baseball and Softball

As spring draws near, baseball season is just around the corner for many Little League youth baseball and softball players.  I wanted to take some time to share a few resources that are available around the web on the prevention of youth baseball and softball pitching injuries.  The dramatic increase in youth throwing injuries is mindboggling and really a shame.  I review the medical reports from kids entering the professional baseball draft and I often shake my head as I see so many preventable injuries.  The majority of experts would agree that the number one contributing factor to youth throwing injuries is overuse (one may even call this abuse…).  We are getting much better at monitoring workloads and avoiding overuse, but the more information we can spread to parents, coaches, and even the players themselves the better.

The American Orthopedic Society for Sports Medicine (AOSSM) has two great resources on the prevention and emergency management of youth baseball and softball injuries, including a PowerPoint presentation and a downloadable handbook.  These are great resources for parents, coaches, physicians, athletic trainings, EMTs, and anyone else that may be covering youth games.  I wanted to highlight them here to help spread the word on injury management in our youth sports.  Kudos to the AOSSM for making these quality resources available free to the public.

Below is a viewable copy of the presentation that is free from the AOSSM website.  You can also download the full detailed handbook.

Other Resources on Preventing Youth Baseball and Softball Injuries

There are many other great resources on preventing youth baseball and softball injuries:

  • Little League Baseball’s official site has a lot of great resources including a special page on Little League pitch count restrictions.
  • View a presentation from Drs. James Andrews and Glenn Fleisig on youth injuries at the Little League site including information on biomechanics and recommendations that have shaped recent USA Baseball and Little League pitch count restrictions.
  • The American Sports Medicine Institute has information on safety guidelines from their USA Baseball Medical & Safety Advisory Committee Guidelines.  This is a must read.
  • USA Baseball also has several publications available regarding many aspects of medical care in youth baseball and softball.

I hope this information is useful for you and we continue to develop safe guidelines for the care of our youth athletes.  Best of luck this season!

 

Photo by Wildernice, Presentation copyrighted by the AOSSM.

Learn More From Mike - FREE Newsletter!

Subscribe to my free newsletter now to learn a ton more and received 3 free gifts: A 36-page eBook "Solving the Patellofemoral Mystery," a 30-minute webinar "What's New in 2010," and my updated accelerated rehab protocol following ACL reconstruction.  I hate spam as much as you, your email is never sold or shared!

Other Related Articles:

2 Responses to “Preventing Little League Pitching Injuries”

  1. THANKS for all the resources. I am going to be running our “Athlete’s shoulder” talk in a couple weeks and I will be sure to add these to the list of resources.

  2. Your welcome Amy.

Leave a Reply

*

 Subscribe to Mike's FREE Newsletter and Learn More! 

Notify me of followup comments via e-mail. You can also click here to subscribe without commenting.