Our impact
The establishment of a national injury surveillance system in BUCS American football is expected to generate both immediate and long-term benefits for athletes, coaches, governing bodies, and the wider sporting community. By providing medically reported evidence on injury incidence and characteristics within UK university American football, the project will address a critical gap in the literature and inform data-driven decision making in a rapidly expanding sport.
In the short term, the findings will enable BUCS, the British American Football Association (BAFA), and individual university clubs to understand the nature and scale of injury risk in their sport. This will facilitate the development of evidence-based strategies for injury prevention, ranging from targeted coaching interventions and training load management to the refinement of protective equipment standards. Medical provision for student-athletes may also be enhanced, with clubs and institutions able to allocate resources more effectively once patterns of injury burden are better understood.
Beyond the university setting, the outcomes of this project carry wider implications for sport in the UK. Many student-athletes transition to senior and national-level play, and injury surveillance at the university stage can provide early insights into trends that may persist across levels of participation. Moreover, lessons learned from this surveillance model could inform approaches to other emerging or non-traditional collision sports in the UK higher education sector, where injury data remain scarce.
At a regional level, the project will contribute to safeguarding the wellbeing of student-athletes by promoting safer participation in a sport that continues to grow in popularity. Enhancing welfare provision supports not only athletic development but also academic progression, as injuries sustained in university sport can have consequences that extend into education, employability, and long-term health. By equipping institutions with robust data, the study aligns with broader objectives of supporting healthy and sustainable student experiences within higher education.
Internationally, the work contributes to the global discourse on injury surveillance and prevention in collision sports. While extensive surveillance systems exist in professional American football in the United States, little is known about the epidemiology of the sport outside this context, particularly in countries where the sport is emerging and infrastructures differ. Findings from this project will therefore expand the evidence base beyond North America, offering comparative insights that may inform cross-cultural understanding of injury risk, coaching practices, and welfare provision.
Finally, by embedding injury surveillance into the BUCS framework, this project creates a foundation for long-term monitoring. Establishing consistent and reliable data collection processes ensures that injury trends can be tracked across multiple seasons, allowing the impact of rule changes, training interventions, or medical initiatives to be evaluated over time. This sustainability is crucial for maximising the value of the investment and ensuring that the project has a lasting influence.
In summary, this work is important because it advances understanding of injury risk in an under-researched sport, strengthens athlete welfare provision in higher education, and contributes to international knowledge on collision sport safety. Its outcomes will resonate locally, nationally, and globally by supporting safer participation and promoting evidence-based practice in American football and beyond.