(Press-News.org) Contact information: Marguerite Beck
marbeck@wakehealth.edu
336-716-2415
Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center
Not safe at home
Tag plays at the plate in major leagues have highest injury rate, study finds
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Jan. 21, 2014 – Tag plays at home plate have the highest injury rate in professional baseball, occurring 4.3 times more often than other base-running plays, according to researchers at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center.
"The current Major League Baseball (MLB) rules have a loophole that allows catchers to stand in the baseline and block the plate if the ball is being thrown home, which allows for collisions," said Daryl Rosenbaum, M.D., sports medicine physician at Wake Forest Baptist and lead author of the study. "Over the years, whether intentional or not, this oversight has permitted a different standard of play at home plate than other bases."
The research is published in the current online edition of the International Journal of Sports Medicine.
To reduce the number of home-plate collisions in an otherwise limited-contact sport, Rosenbaum suggests that the major leagues adopt the collegiate rule, which prohibits defensive players, including catchers, from blocking a base, including home plate.
A similar proposal has been proposed by the MLB owners and is awaiting approval by the players and umpires.
"Making this change would protect both catchers and baserunners," Rosenbaum said. "The runner wouldn't be able to run into the catcher to knock the ball loose and be called safe, and the catcher would have to stand behind or next to the baseline rather than in it to tag the runner out."
In the study, the researchers looked at three types of MLB plays from 2002 to 2011 -- non-force putouts by a catcher at home plate (Catcher Tag Out), groundball force outs at second base with less than two outs (Double Play Attempt) and outfield assisted non-force putouts of runners attempting to advance to second or third base (Outfield Assist 2nd/3rd) ,which served as the control play.
This data was cross-referenced with 2002 to 2011 disabled lists to see if an involved player went on the disabled list the day of or day after the play. An online search for each match determined if the injury was attributable to that play.
The findings showed that the rate of injury for Catcher Tag Out was 4.3 times higher than the control play, Rosenbaum said. The Double Play Attempt was statistically even with the Outfield Assist control play.
Nearly three players per year were injured severely enough in tag plays at the plate to be put on the 15-day disabled list, according to the study findings. Using the average MLB player salary for 2011 of $3.1 million, injuries from home plate collisions cost teams an average of approximately $2.3 million annually.
"That's just the financial impact," Rosenbaum said. "More difficult to quantify but also worth considering are the players' health and the effect of their absences on their teams' performance.
"I don't think fans go to baseball games to see collisions and I don't think if you remove them it would change the inherent nature of the game," he added. "Why are collisions allowed in this one scenario when they're not really part of the game?"
###
Support for the research was provided by the Department of Family and Community Medicine at Wake Forest Baptist.
S. W. Davis, M.A., of Wake Forest Baptist co-authored the study.
Not safe at home
Tag plays at the plate in major leagues have highest injury rate, study finds
2014-01-22
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Reducing liver protein SIRT1 levels
2014-01-22
Reducing liver protein SIRT1 levels
(Boston) – A new study led by Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) demonstrates that the abnormal metabolism linked to obesity could be regulated in part by the interaction of two metabolic regulators, ...
Polar bear diet changes as sea ice melts
2014-01-22
Polar bear diet changes as sea ice melts
3-part study shows that some Hudson Bay polar bears are switching prey, mixing plant and animal food sources as they survive in changing enviroment
A series of papers recently published by scientists at the American ...
Hospitals and nursing homes can learn much from hospice care
2014-01-22
Hospitals and nursing homes can learn much from hospice care
Basic hospice strategies can make last days of dying inpatients more comfortable and dignified
There is much value in training hospital and nursing home staff in the basics of palliative care to make the last ...
New poll finds diabetes top health concern for Latino families
2014-01-22
New poll finds diabetes top health concern for Latino families
Boston, MA – A new NPR/Robert Wood Johnson Foundation/Harvard School of Public Health poll was released today on the views of Latinos in America about their health and health care, communities, ...
UM study finds wolf predation of cattle affects calf weight in Montana
2014-01-22
UM study finds wolf predation of cattle affects calf weight in Montana
MISSOULA – A recent study by University of Montana faculty and graduate students found that wolf predation of cattle contributes to lower weight gain in calves on western Montana ...
Researcher proves mass important at nano-scale, matters in calculations and measurements
2014-01-22
Researcher proves mass important at nano-scale, matters in calculations and measurements
New model drastically reduces run times
A UT Arlington engineering professor has proven that the effect of mass is important, can be measured and has a significant impact on ...
Analysis of salamander jump reveals an unexpected twist
2014-01-22
Analysis of salamander jump reveals an unexpected twist
A small, secretive creature with unlikely qualifications for defying gravity may hold the answer to an entirely new way of getting off the ground.
Salamanders—or at least several species of the Plethodontidae ...
CU-built software uses big data to battle forgetting with personalized content review
2014-01-22
CU-built software uses big data to battle forgetting with personalized content review
Computer software similar to that used by online retailers to recommend products to a shopper can help students remember the content they've studied, according to a new study by the University ...
Common blood cancer may be initiated by single mutation in bone cells
2014-01-22
Common blood cancer may be initiated by single mutation in bone cells
Potential drug target in bone cells may help 40 percent of patients with mutation
NEW YORK, NY (January 21, 2014) — Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a blood cancer, but for many ...
Predatory organisms at depth
2014-01-22
Predatory organisms at depth
Viruses within the ocean floor comprise the greatest fraction of the deep biosphere
In the current issue of the Journal of the International Society for Microbial Ecology (ISME Journal, 20.1.2014) scientists ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Reevaluating nonoperative management for pediatric uncomplicated acute appendicitis
Metabolically active visceral fat linked to aggressive endometrial cancer, new study reveals
Scientists glimpse how enzymes “dance” while they work, and why that’s important
California partnership aided COVID-19 response and health equity, report finds
University of Oklahoma secures $19.9 million for revolutionary radar technology
Study finds restoring order to dividing cancer cells may prevent metastasis
High-accuracy tumor detection with label-free microscopy and neural networks
Wayne State research reveals fetuses exposed to Zika virus have long-term immune challenges
Researchers deconstruct chikungunya outbreaks to improve prediction and vaccine development
Study finds one-year change on CT scans linked to future outcomes in fibrotic lung disease
Discovery of a novel intracellular trafficking pathway in plant cells
New tool helps forecast volcano slope collapses and tsunamis
Molecular coating cleans up noisy quantum light
From Parkinson's to rare diseases, discovered a key switch for cellular health
Tiny sugars in the brain disrupt emotional circuits, fueling depression
Mini-organs reveal how the cervix defends itself
Africa, climate, and food: How to feed a continent without increasing its carbon footprint
Researchers demonstrates substrate design principles for scalable superconducting quantum materials
How better software choices could cut US health care costs
Concussion history in NCAA athletes yields mixed health outcomes
Counting plastic reveals hidden waste and sparks action
Warming oceans may pose a serious threat to American lobsters
Deaths from drug-induced unintentional injury rise across the US
In car crashes with pedestrians, age and zip code may predict extent of traumatic injuries
AI optimizes evacuation, diagnosis, and treatment of wounded soldiers in Ukraine
Mastectomy linked to worsened sexual health, body image after surgery
Drop in credit score after cancer diagnosis linked to increased mortality, study shows
Use of weight loss drugs before bariatric surgery has soared in recent years, study finds
EMS call times in rural areas take at least 20 minutes longer than national average
Rectal bleeding in young adults linked to 8.5 times higher risk of colorectal cancer
[Press-News.org] Not safe at homeTag plays at the plate in major leagues have highest injury rate, study finds