Posted on 06/29/2023 7:07:08 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
Pickleball, America’s fastest-growing sport, is taking a toll on players’ wrists, legs and shoulders. And it’s especially popular with injury-prone seniors, which is driving up the cost burden.
Pickleball injuries may cost Americans $377 million in health care costs this year, accounting for 5% to 10% of total unexpected medical costs, UBS analysts estimated in a report Monday.
“While we generally think of exercise as positively impacting health outcomes, the ‘can-do’ attitude of today’s seniors can pose greater risk in other areas such as sports injuries, leading to a greater number of orthopedic procedures,” the analysts said.
Pickleball-related injuries occur most frequently in older people, according to a 2021 medical study. From 2010-2019, 86% of emergency department visits due to pickleball injuries occurred in people over 60 years old, according to the medical study. Around 60% of pickleball injuries are sprains, strains and fractures. Twenty percent are contusions, abrasions, or internal injuries; and fewer than 10% are lacerations or dislocations.
The analysts estimated that there will be around 67,000 emergency room visits, 366,000 outpatient visits and 9,000 outpatient surgeries related to pickleball injuries this year.
Pickleball exploded since the pandemic began, and that’s leading to more injuries. According to the Sports and Fitness Industry Association trade group, pickleball has grown from 3.5 million players in 2019 to 8.9 million in 2022. The number of players will jump to 22 million this year, the UBS analysts estimate.
(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...
When pickleball is outlawed we’ll go back to Jarts.
Big Pharma and Big Med to Pickleball: Hold our beer...
2 relatives with broken wrists in their first six months of amateur club competition. Tennis is less dangerous.
Maybe people say it’s a pickle ball injury when they have hemorrhoids? People used to say backache.
Ok everybody, back on the couch!
My aunt told me about Pickleball back in 2008. She was in her late 70’s. It was new back then.
The other day I noticed a bunch of people playing pickleball on the tennis courts at my community park. Usually the tennis courts don’t get much use.
The convergence of pickleballers reminded me of the tennis craze back in the late ‘70s and into the ‘80s, when public tennis courts would be jam packed on a weekend.
Pickleball also brings to mind wallyball, a slowed down hybrid of racquetball and volleyball that piggybacked on the racquetball craze of the ‘80s which was itself probably a piggyback on the tennis craze.
Which prompts another question...does anyone play racquetball anymore? Racquetball was a serious calorie burner with its nonstop bursts of speed.
It's already being played by more people than tennis. It's an ascendant sport. It's now an olympic sport. Tennis courts being converted everywhere is proof of how it's regarded now.
Not just for the old. Not at all.
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