The Fiji Times

World Rugby conducts study

- ■ REUTERS

OTAGO - World Rugby will undertake a study using mouthguard­s embedded with microchips to monitor impacts during games with the aim of improving the detection and prevention of head injuries, the sport’s global governing body said.

More than 700 community level players in New Zealand, from Under-13 level and upwards, will participat­e in the study, which starts this month and is being led by academics from University of Otago.

The mouthguard­s collect and transmit data on head impacts in real time during games.

“Player welfare continues to be top priority,” World Rugby Chief Medical Officer Eanna Falvey said. “By commission­ing and partnering in research, we can make evidence-based decisions that will advance our understand­ing of injuries.

“We have been monitoring instrument­ed mouthguard technology for some time, and rapid advances in sensitivit­y make it possible to distinguis­h between head impact, jump or shouting. The scale of this study should not be underestim­ated.”

Clubs in England’s Premiershi­p –– Leicester,

Gloucester and Harlequins –– already use microchipp­ed mouthguard­s to monitor the impact of collisions.

Other sports are conducting mouthguard trials, including rugby league side Salford, while Liverpool and Manchester City will also use chipped mouthguard­s in age-group and women’s teams next season.

World Rugby also said this week that it would evaluate the latest eyetrackin­g technology to assist with the identifica­tion and management of concussion­s in the sport.

Concussion­s and their long-term effects have been in the spotlight since former players filed a lawsuit against governing bodies World Rugby, England’s Rugby Football Union and the Welsh Rugby Union which alleged a failure to protect them from the risks.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? Wales’ Alun Wyn Jones in action with Italy’s Marco Fuser and George Biagi during the Six Nations Championsh­ip at Stadio Olimpico, Rome.
Picture: REUTERS Wales’ Alun Wyn Jones in action with Italy’s Marco Fuser and George Biagi during the Six Nations Championsh­ip at Stadio Olimpico, Rome.

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