Abstract
Background:
Contemporary, sport-specific comparisons of injury patterns and epidemiological trends between high school- and college-aged football athletes are limited and dated, particularly from a single, nationally representative data set.
Purpose:
To provide an updated, comparative assessment of the epidemiology of football-related injuries among male high school- and college-aged athletes and to characterize the burden of these injuries on emergency departments (EDs) across the United States (US).
Study Design:
Descriptive epidemiology study.
Methods:
The National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS) was queried for football-related injuries among high school-aged (14-18 years) and college-aged (19-23 years) male athletes from 2015 to 2024. Injury characteristics, anatomic location, diagnosis, and ED disposition were analyzed. Annual National Federation of State High School Associations and National Collegiate Athletic Association participation counts defined at-risk populations. The incidence was calculated as ED visits per 100 at-risk participants, and incidence rate ratios (IRRs) with 95% CIs were used to compare levels of play.
Results:
Among 40,249 unweighted NEISS cases, the weighted national estimate was 1,377,935 football-related ED visits among male athletes aged 14 to 23 years during 2015 and 2024. College-aged athletes were significantly more likely than high school-aged athletes to be evaluated with football-related injuries (21.34 vs 12.02 per 100 at-risk persons; IRR, 1.78 [95% CI, 1.77-1.78]). The head, shoulders, knees, and fingers were most frequently involved. College-aged athletes had higher rates across most diagnosis categories—including laceration (IRR, 4.35 [95% CI, 4.26-4.45]), dislocation (IRR, 3.44; 95% CI, 3.38-3.50), and nerve damage (IRR, 2.23 [95% CI, 1.97-2.53]). Injuries to the mouth (IRR, 5.34 [95% CI, 5.11-5.57]) and face (IRR, 4.55 [95% CI, 4.45-4.66]) were disproportionately higher in college-aged athletes. Most visits resulted in treatment and discharge, but admissions and observations were more frequent among college-aged athletes.
Conclusion:
Among football-related injuries evaluated in US EDs from 2015 to 2024, the incidence was higher in college-aged than high school-aged athletes, with a concentration in head and upper-extremity presentations. Collegiate players sustained higher rates across nearly all injury types and locations, emphasizing the need for targeted prevention and clinical vigilance at advanced levels of play.
Keywords
American tackle football has the largest youth and collegiate participation in the United States (US), with more than 1 million high school athletes and over 80,000 collegiate athletes competing21,22 in 2023-2024. Despite this scale, contemporary, sport-specific comparisons of injury epidemiology between high school- and college-aged football athletes remain limited.
Football involves frequent high-energy actions such as tackling, blocking, cutting, and rapid acceleration and deceleration, which predispose athletes to both acute and overuse injuries. 20 Reported injury rates are substantially higher than in several other common sports, with a particularly high incidence of concussion, knee ligament sprains, ankle sprains, shoulder instability, and injuries to the hand and wrist.3,16,27 Previous studies suggest broadly similar injury categories across levels of play; however, collegiate athletes may experience certain injuries more often and with greater severity, likely reflecting larger body size, higher velocity play, cumulative exposure, and competitive intensity.8,9
Program-level differences between college and high school football in physical development, training demands, and medical coverage may influence injury incidence, anatomic distribution, and emergency department (ED) disposition. 16 Variation in onsite medical coverage may alter the likelihood of ED evaluation compared with sideline care and outpatient follow-up. 16 Understanding how injury patterns and ED resource use differ by level can inform prevention strategies, return-to-play (RTP) counseling, and allocation of sports-medicine resources.
Cross-level comparisons exist, but recent work using a single, nationally representative data set is limited and often outdated.8,16,27 The most recent study to directly compare high school and college football players within 1 nationally representative data set evaluated injuries from 2004 to 2014. 16 Subsequent studies have narrowed focus to specific anatomic regions or diagnoses rather than the full spectrum of injuries.5,7,9 An updated analysis is warranted, particularly across 2015-2024, a period that spans the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and potential shifts in sport participation and care-seeking.
This study aimed to provide an updated, comparative assessment of football-related injuries among male high school- and college-aged athletes and to characterize their burden on US EDs. We hypothesized that collegiate athletes would exhibit higher injury incidence and greater utilization of ED resources than high school-aged athletes.
Methods
Database and Query
This cross-sectional epidemiologic study used data from the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS) to evaluate football-related injuries treated in US EDs between 2015 and 2024. 31 The NEISS database samples approximately 100 hospitals. It provides national estimates of consumer product-related injuries through a stratified probability design. Data are collected by trained hospital coders from clinical records and, when necessary, follow-up telephone interviews. As all patient data are deidentified and publicly available, institutional review board approval was not required for this study.
Data Collection
Injuries were included if the patient was male, aged 14 to 23 years, and the incident was classified under the NEISS football product code 1211. Patients aged 14 to 18 years were categorized as high school-aged, and those aged 19 to 23 years as college-aged. Injury characteristics, anatomic location, diagnosis, and ED disposition were recorded.
Statistical Analysis
Weighted national estimates and 95% CIs were calculated using NEISS sample weights. Football participation data were obtained from the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) and National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) to approximate level-specific at-risk populations.21,22 Because NEISS captures ED-treated football injuries but does not identify school sanctions, league sanctions, or athlete exposure, these denominators were treated as participation-based proxies rather than exact exposure measures. Incidence rates were reported per 100 at-risk persons. Incidence rate ratios (IRRs) with corresponding 95% CIs were calculated to compare rates between high school- and college-aged athletes. IRRs were calculated using Poisson approximations, and confidence intervals were constructed using mid-P exact methods. Statistical analyses were performed using R (Version 4.4.1; R Foundation for Statistical Computing), and significance was set at α≤ .05.
Results
Among 40,249 unweighted NEISS cases, the weighted national estimate was 1,377,935 football-related ED visits among male athletes aged 14 to 23 years during 2015 and 2024. Male college-aged football players sustained significantly higher injury rates than high school-aged players, with an overall incidence of 21.34 versus 12.02 per 100 at-risk persons (Table 1). High school athletes exhibited relatively stable incidence rates, fluctuating by only 10.3 points, whereas college-aged athletes demonstrated consistently higher and more variable rates, with a 28.8-point decline from 2015 to 2020. Both groups demonstrated a sharp decline in 2020, coinciding with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic (Figure 1).
Comparative Characteristics of Male Football Injuries by Age Group a
Data are presented as n (%). IR, incidence rate; IRR, incidence rate ratio.

Annual football-related injury incidence rates among high school-aged and college-aged male athletes treated in US EDs, 2015-2024. ED, emergency department; US, United States.
Injury Patterns
The most frequently injured body regions among male football athletes aged 14 to 23 years included the head, shoulders, knees, and fingers, while strain or sprain remained the most commonly reported diagnosis (Figure 2; Appendix Tables A1 and A2). Weighted estimates showed that strains or sprains accounted for 73% (n = 98,773) of ankle injuries, 58% (n = 16,968) of neck injuries, and 46% (n = 69,728) of knee injuries among male football athletes aged 14 to 23 years between 2015 and 2024.

Incidence rates among male football athletes evaluated in the emergency department. Bolded text indicates the top 5 injury sites by region. IR, incidence rate; IRR, incidence rate ratio.
Although high school athletes represented 89% of ED visits for football-related injuries, incidence rates adjusted for the at-risk population revealed consistently higher injury rates among college-aged athletes. Notably, college players had significantly elevated rates of injuries to the mouth (IRR, 5.34 [95% CI, 5.11-5.57]), face (IRR, 4.55 [95% CI, 4.45-4.66]), unspecified regions (IRR, 3.80 [95% CI, 3.50-4.13]), global areas (IRR, 3.45 [95% CI, 3.33-3.57]), and upper leg (IRR, 3.19 [95% CI, 3.07-3.32]) (Table 2). They also demonstrated higher rates of nearly all diagnoses—including laceration (IRR, 4.35 [95% CI, 4.26-4.45]), dislocation (IRR, 3.44 [95% CI, 3.38-3.50]), and nerve damage (IRR, 2.23 [95% CI, 1.97-2.53]).
Injury Characteristics and Population-Adjusted Incidence Rates by Age Group a
Data are presented as weighted national estimates and row percentages. Percentages represent the proportion of each injury category accounted for by high school-aged versus college-aged athletes. Incidence rates are reported per 100 at-risk persons. IR, incidence rate.
Disposition
Most football-related injuries were treated and discharged from the ED, accounting for 96.2% of high school-aged and 94.7% of college-aged athletes (IR, 11.56 vs 20.20 per 100 at-risk persons). College-aged athletes experienced significantly greater rates of hospital admission (IRR, 1.94 [95% CI, 1.88-2]), observation (IRR, 3.94 [95% CI, 3.59-4.31]), and leaving against medical advice (IRR, 3.63 [95% CI, 3.49-3.78]). Overall, college-aged athletes were nearly twice as likely to present to the ED with a football-related injury (IRR, 1.78 [95% CI, 1.77-1.78]).
Discussion
In this national analysis of 2015-2024 NEISS data, college-aged male football athletes were approximately 1.8 times more likely than high school-aged athletes to be evaluated in the ED for football-related injuries. Although most ED visits by count involved high school-aged athletes, the incidence, standardized to participation, was higher at the collegiate level. Injury distributions were similar across levels, with the head, shoulders, knees, and fingers most frequently involved. Nearly all patients were treated and released; however, college-aged athletes were more often admitted to the hospital or required short-term observation.
These findings are consistent with surveillance literature demonstrating a greater injury burden at higher levels of play across multiple sports, including football.6,15,16,23,25 Collegiate systems routinely report higher incidence per athlete-exposure and a greater proportion of severe injuries, surgical cases, and time-loss events compared with high school programs.6,15,16,23,25 In football specifically, collegiate injury rates can approach double those observed in high school cohorts, with a higher overuse burden and more injuries resulting in 21+ days of time loss.16,25 Plausible contributing factors include larger body mass, higher play velocities, cumulative workload, and competitive intensity, each of which increases tissue loading and collision energy at the collegiate level.8,9
Both levels experienced a marked decline in ED visit incidence in 2020, coincident with COVID-19-related disruptions to participation and care-seeking. National reports during this period document widespread reductions in ED utilization and organized sport participation.12,17,30 These findings contribute to a growing body of research highlighting the pandemic's durable influence on musculoskeletal injury epidemiology.11,24,32
Anatomic patterns were similar across levels; however, college-aged athletes had disproportionately higher rates of injuries to the mouth and face, unspecified or global regions, and the upper leg. These distributions are consistent with higher-velocity contact and collision forces typical of collegiate play.4,8,16,27 Surveillance from the NCAA Injury Surveillance Program and complementary epidemiologic studies report elevated rates of maxillofacial, head, and upper-leg injuries among collegiate football athletes, with player contact cited as the predominant mechanism.4,8,16,27
These data highlight practical prevention targets. Consistent mouthguard use reduces the risk of dentofacial injury in collegiate contact sports, although adherence is variable.4,29 Technique-focused instruction for contact and tackling, especially in open-field scenarios, may mitigate head and facial injuries. 8 For the lower extremity, neuromuscular and eccentric strengthening programs emphasizing the hamstrings, quadriceps, and adductors reduce injury risk in team-sport populations.19,26
Strain or sprain were the most frequently reported diagnoses, aligning with the dynamics of the football sport. Tackle football combines high-energy contact (tackling and blocking) with rapid acceleration-deceleration, cutting, and awkward landings that collectively load periarticular soft tissues and stabilizing ligaments. 20 In our analysis, strains and sprains were the most common diagnoses in both groups, with a higher incidence among collegiate-aged athletes than high school-aged athletes. This age-based gradient is directionally consistent with web-based injury surveillance data showing higher overall injury rates at the collegiate level and higher ankle and knee sprain rates among college athletes compared with high school athletes, likely reflecting greater collision energy, higher-velocity play, and cumulative workload at advanced levels of competition.5,7,16 In addition, because our cohort reflects ED-treated injuries, sprain/strain presentations may be disproportionately represented when acute pain, swelling, perceived instability, or functional limitation prompts emergency evaluation to exclude fracture or other structural injury. 28 Collectively, these findings reinforce prevention priorities centered on neuromuscular and proprioceptive programs and targeted strength and landing-mechanics interventions, alongside coaching that emphasizes safer cutting and contact mechanics to mitigate the performance-injury tradeoffs inherent to high-speed directional change.10,14,19
ED disposition patterns support a comparative severity signal among collegiate athletes, who were more likely to be admitted or observed and to leave against medical advice. This may reflect greater injury severity, expedited team-based follow-up preferences, and scheduling pressures around competition. In addition, because high school athletes are typically minors who present with a parent or guardian, reliable home monitoring after ED discharge (particularly after suspected concussion or sedating medications) may be easier to ensure. Conversely, college-aged patients may present unaccompanied, and if adequate home observation cannot be confirmed, clinicians may favor observation or admission.1,18 ED-based and transport surveillance similarly indicate higher use of advanced imaging, procedures, and admission among collegiate athletes, especially for head, facial, and lower-extremity injuries.2,13 Together, these findings support level-specific prevention and coordinated post-ED care pathways.
The clinical implications of these findings are threefold. First, ED clinicians evaluating collegiate football athletes may consider a lower threshold for advanced imaging, specialty consultation, or short-term observation, particularly for facial, lower-extremity, and high-energy contact injuries, given the higher rates of fracture, dislocation, and hospital-based disposition in this group. Second, these data support closer coordination between ED clinicians, athletic trainers, and team physicians to ensure timely follow-up, structured RTP counseling, and appropriate monitoring after discharge. Third, the differing injury distributions between levels suggest that prevention strategies should be level-specific: collegiate programs may particularly benefit from interventions targeting collision-risk mitigation, facial protection, and lower-extremity resilience, whereas both high school and collegiate programs should continue to emphasize concussion recognition, shoulder stabilization, and hand protection. Collectively, these findings may help guide resource allocation, sideline-to-ED referral decisions, and post-ED management pathways in football athletes.
Limitations
This study is not without limitations. As with any secondary database analysis, results are constrained by the variables captured and coded in NEISS and by its scope to ED encounters; injuries treated in urgent care, primary care, athletic training rooms, or team physician clinics are not represented. This limitation may have become more consequential over the study period, as increasing urgent care utilization may have diverted some lower-acuity football injuries away from EDs. Moreover, temporal changes in ED-treated injury incidence may reflect shifts in health care utilization in addition to changes in true injury burden or sport participation. This distinction is particularly relevant when comparing our findings with previous school-based surveillance studies, including Kerr et al, 16 which relied on athletic trainer-reported injuries rather than ED-based case capture. These approaches likely sample different portions of the injury spectrum and should be viewed as complementary rather than directly comparable. Restricting to ED visits may bias the case mix toward conditions perceived to require immediate imaging or specialty input. NEISS records visits rather than unique athletes, precluding identification of repeat presentations, and lacks information on position, class year, competition versus practice, protective equipment use, and league or division. Incidence denominators were derived from annual NFHS and NCAA participation counts and therefore serve as participation-based proxies rather than as athlete-exposure measures. Because NEISS product code 1211 does not distinguish between school sanction, league, or governing body, some numerator cases may reflect football participation outside NFHS or NCAA membership, particularly among the 19- to 23-year-old age group. Accordingly, these estimates should be interpreted as comparative participation-adjusted ED visit rates rather than precise sport-surveillance incidence. Access to athletic trainers, team physicians, and imaging, as well as thresholds for ED referral, likely varies by institution and level of play, and collegiate programs may divert minor injuries away from the ED. Collegiate athletes are more likely to have access to on-site athletic trainers and team medical staff, which may reduce ED utilization. Finally, the pandemic period altered participation and care-seeking, complicating year-to-year comparisons despite consistent analytic methods.
Conclusion
Among football-related injuries evaluated in US EDs from 2015 to 2024, incidence was higher in college-aged than high school-aged athletes, with a concentration in head and upper-extremity presentations. Collegiate players sustained higher rates across nearly all injury types and locations, emphasizing the need for targeted prevention and clinical vigilance at advanced levels of play.
Footnotes
Appendix
Unweighted NEISS Sample Counts Underlying Diagnosis for Football-Related Injuries Among Male Patients Aged 14 to 23 Years, 2015-2024 a
| Diagnosis | High School-Aged, Raw n | College-Aged, Raw n | Total Raw n |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strain or sprain | 8858 | 1048 | 9906 |
| Fracture | 7965 | 657 | 8622 |
| Other/not stated | 6529 | 845 | 7374 |
| Contusions, abrasions | 3935 | 307 | 4242 |
| Concussions | 3686 | 190 | 3876 |
| Internal organ injury | 2216 | 165 | 2381 |
| Dislocation | 1693 | 365 | 2058 |
| Laceration | 985 | 255 | 1240 |
| Hematoma | 167 | 12 | 179 |
| Crushing | 49 | 1 | 50 |
| Dermatitis, conjunctivitis | 47 | 4 | 51 |
| Nerve damage | 44 | 11 | 55 |
Values are unweighted case counts from the NEISS sample. NEISS, National Electronic Injury Surveillance System.
Final revision submitted March 8, 2026; accepted March 21, 2026.
One or more of the authors has declared the following potential conflict of interest or source of funding: N.P. has received consulting fees from DePuy/Medical Device Business Services. This study used publicly available, deidentified data from the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System and was deemed exempt from institutional review board oversight.
