Athletic Training and Rehabilitation
Athletes can injure themselves when playing sports or doing exercise. Athletic training includes prevention, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation of injuries, strength training and specific conditioning. Rehabilitation aims to restore injured to normal function by gradual exercise movements. Athletic training is practiced by athletic trainers, health care professionals. Athletic training also encompasses the intervention of emergency, acute and chronic medical conditions involving impairment, functional limitations and disabilities. Certified athletic trainers or health professionals train athletes in preventing, recognizing, managing, and rehabilitating injuries that result from physical activity. Many athletic trainers work in educational settings, such as colleges or universities. Others work in physicians' offices or for professional sports teams. Exercise physiologists work in hospitals, outpatient clinics, and university laboratories. Journal of Athletic Enhancement (JAE) is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal and aims to publish the most complete and reliable source of information on the discoveries and current developments in the mode of original articles, review articles, case reports, short communications, etc. in all areas of athletic enhancement and making them available online freely without any restrictions or any other subscriptions to researchers worldwide. Journal of Athletic Enhancement focuses on the topics include sporting events, aspects of enhancement process, use of performance-enhancing substances, psychological and physical health of the athlete, rehabilitate injuries related to sport or recreational activity, athletic physiology and nutrition of athletes.