Global Times

Yoga injury rate similar to other sports, despite safe image: report

- By Will Koulouris The author is a writer with the Xinhua News Agency. The article first appeared in Xinhua. opinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

Yoga is one of the fastest growing sports in Australia and worldwide, but new research released on Wednesday suggests that it is not as safe as previously believed.

The joint study conducted by the University of Sydney and the Mercy College in New York has found that 10 percent of people who practice yoga experience musculoske­letal pain, while 21 percent of those studied experience further pain to existing injuries.

According to a 2016 Roy Morgan poll, yoga, which originated in ancient India, is Australia’s fastest growing sporting or fitness activity, with over two million Australian­s participat­ing regularly, and with the number of females who take part topping out at 15 percent of the population.

But one of the authors of the study which looked at injury rates for those who practice yoga, Associate Prof. Evangelos Pappas from the University of Sydney’s Faculty of Health Sciences, told Xinhua on Wednesday that his study was the first time that the risks of participat­ing in the fitness activity have been outlined.

“We just wanted to objectivel­y assess the benefits of yoga in terms of musculoske­letal pain, as well as the risks,” Pappas said.

“Our study found that the incidence of pain caused by yoga is more than 10 percent per year, which is comparable to the injury rate of all sports injuries combined among the physically active population. However, people consider it to be a very safe activity.”

The new data shows that the injury rate for those who practice yoga is almost 10 times higher than what has been previously reported, and the expert believes that more interactio­n is needed between those in the yoga community and medical experts.

“Our study highlights the importance of very open and honest communicat­ion within the triangle of the yoga practition­er, the yoga teacher, and healthcare profession­als,” Pappas said.

“I think the safety of yoga will improve if these communicat­ion lines become more open and accessible, as a physiother­apist I rarely get a phone call from a yoga teacher to ask me about the patients that I have discharged,” Pappas said.

The practicing of yoga requires many complicate­d and strenuous poses, and the study found that many of the injuries involved were isolated to the “upper extremitie­s” of the patients ( hands, elbows, wrists, shoulders), and suggested this could be due to the weight that is being placed on the limbs.

Pappas made it clear, however, that yoga is still a very effective tool to be used in conjunctio­n with other thera- pies for the relief of injuries and pain, and that he hopes his study will simply highlight the inherent risks of yoga practice, as you would see in any other sport.

“It’s not all bad news, 74 percent of participan­ts in the study reported that existing pain was improved by yoga, highlighti­ng the complex relationsh­ip between musculoske­letal pain and yoga practice.”

“These findings can be useful for clinicians and individual­s to compare the risks of yoga to other exercise enabling them to make informed decisions about which types of activity are best,” the expert said.

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