The acute:chronic workload ratio: challenges and prospects for improvement

07/11/2019
by   Chinchin Wang, et al.
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Injuries occur when an athlete performs a greater amount of activity (workload) than what their body can absorb. To maximize the positive effects of training while avoiding injuries, athletes and coaches need to determine safe workload levels. The International Olympic Committee has recommended using the acute:chronic workload ratio (ACRatio) to monitor injury risk, and has provided thresholds to minimize risk. However, there are several limitations to the ACRatio which may impact the validity of current recommendations. In this review, we discuss previously published and novel challenges with the ACRatio, and possible strategies to address them. These challenges include 1) formulating the ACRatio as a proportion rather than a measure of change, 2) its use of unweighted averages to measure activity loads, 3) inapplicability of the ACRatio to sports where athletes taper their activity, 4) discretization of the ACRatio prior to model selection, 5) the establishment of the model using sparse data, 6) potential bias in the ACRatio of injured athletes, 7) unmeasured confounding, and 8) application of the ACRatio to subsequent injuries.

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