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Mark Roe

Researcher at University College Dublin

Publications -  33
Citations -  602

Mark Roe is an academic researcher from University College Dublin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 24 publications receiving 397 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark Roe include National University of Ireland & Institute of Technology, Tallaght.

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High chronic training loads and exposure to bouts of maximal velocity running reduce injury risk in elite Gaelic football

TL;DR: Players who had higher chronic training loads tolerated increased distances and exposures to maximal velocity when compared to players exposed to low chronic training Loads (≤4750AU), while under- and over-exposure of players to maximal Velocity events increased the risk of injury.
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Protection Against Spikes in Workload With Aerobic Fitness and Playing Experience: The Role of the Acute:Chronic Workload Ratio on Injury Risk in Elite Gaelic Football.

TL;DR: Moderate workloads, coupled with moderate to high changes in the acute:chronic workload ratio, appear to be protective for Gaelic football players.
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COVID-19 Prevention and Control Measures in Workplace Settings: A Rapid Review and Meta-Analysis.

TL;DR: A rapid review and meta-analysis was conducted to synthesize evidence assessing the effectiveness of COVID-19 IPC measures implemented in global workplace settings through April 2021 as discussed by the authors, where 60 studies from healthcare, nursing home, meatpacking, manufacturing, and office settings were included, accounting for ~280,000 employees based in Europe, Asia, and North America.
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Hamstring injuries in elite Gaelic football: an 8-year investigation to identify injury rates, time-loss patterns and players at increased risk.

TL;DR: Hamstring injuries are the most frequent injury in elite Gaelic football, with incidences increasing from 2008–2011 to 2012–2015, and tailoring risk management strategies to injury history, age and playing position may reduce the burden of hamstring injuries.
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A six stage operational framework for individualising injury risk management in sport.

TL;DR: The current article discusses previous etiology and injury prevention models before proposing a new operational framework that aims to design, deliver, and monitor risk management strategies that ensure a low susceptibility to injury is maintained during pursuits to enhance performance.