Considerations for a women’s rehabilitation programme following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: a concept

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Authors

Melissa J Haberfield, Alex Donaldson, Kay M Crossley, Brooke E Patterson, Jackie L Whittaker, Adam G Culvenor, Sonika Balyan, Yana Dellavedova, Jaye Dickinson, Jacqueline Gurr, Lauren Graham, Tali E Ryan-Atwood6, Andrea M Bruder

Abstract

Objective To identify gender/sex-specific considerations to enhance anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) rupture rehabilitation experiences and outcomes among women.

Methods Mixed-methods concept mapping. 19 women 1–3 years post-ACL rupture and 28 rehabilitation practitioners (68% physiotherapists) who regularly treat women following ACL rupture brainstormed statements to a prompt (‘What factors should be addressed in ACL rehabilitation for women (18–45 years)?’) before thematically sorting and rating the statements for importance and feasibility (5-point Likert scales).

Results Ninety unique statements were brainstormed, sorted and rated. A seven-cluster solution was identified—from most to least important (number of statements, cluster mean importance/5)—1. foster goal-driven rehabilitation (18, 3.98); 2. promote mental and emotional well-being (13, 3.96); 3. create adaptable and supportive environments (10, 3.74); 4. provide education and resources (16, 3.73); 5. engage the whole team for the whole woman (13, 3.52); 6. address accessibility and competing demands (8, 3.36) and 7. build peer, group and social support (12, 3.22). ‘Goal-driven rehabilitation’ was deemed the most, and ‘peer, group and social support’ the least feasible cluster to address in women-specific ACL rehabilitation.

Conclusion Enhancing ACL rehabilitation strategies could reduce the gender/sex disparity for women most at risk of inferior short- and long-term outcomes. Practitioners can leverage our seven-cluster solution for practical guidance in creating supportive and empowering environments that prioritise collaboration and active listening, enabling women-centred goal-driven rehabilitation practices. Lower-rated clusters, such as peer, group and social support, may remain crucial, as they reflect known influences on rehabilitation motivation and adherence.

Link

Haberfield MJ, Donaldson A, Crossley KM, et alConsiderations for a women’s rehabilitation programme following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: a concept mapping approach to enhance women’s outcomes. British Journal of Sports Medicine Published Online First: 07 October 2025.