Sara J. Gould
University of Alabama at Birmingham
20 Papers
8 Citations
Sara J. Gould is an academic researcher from University of Alabama at Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Concussion. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 14 publications. Previous affiliations of Sara J. Gould include Children's of Alabama & New York University.
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Papers
Exercise During Pregnancy: Obstetricians' Beliefs and Recommendations Compared to American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists' 2015 Guidelines.
TL;DR: Despite believing exercise benefits pregnant women, knowing ACOG’s 2015 guidelines endorse unrestricted exercise for women with uncomplicated pregnancies, and feeling comfortable discussing this topic with patients, obstetricians are not consistently counseling their pregnant patients on exercise.
Exploration of US men’s professional sport organization concussion policies
TL;DR: It is found that concussion policies vary across these organizations, and the most pronounced variation from the CISG consensus statement is the variability in the minimum time to return to play.
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Sideline Coverage: When to Get Radiographs? A Review of Clinical Decision Tools
TL;DR: Clinical decision tools have been developed to aid in the diagnosis and management of injuries commonly sustained during sporting events and tools that have been appropriately validated in populations outside the initial study population can assist sports medicine physicians in the decision of when to get radiographs from the sidelines.
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Effects of prior concussion on symptom severity and recovery time in acute youth concussion.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that an increasing number of prior concussions was associated with a trend toward higher presenting SSS after youth acute concussion but did not show a significant association with recovery time or delayed recovery within 28 days.
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A Plausible Pipeline to Diversifying Orthopaedics: Premedical Programming.
TL;DR: For example, this article found that women faced more barriers than men in pursuing a career in orthopaedics, while men perceived women faced fewer obstacles than men to pursue a career as a surgeon.
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