PLOS Digit Health. 2025 Oct 14;4(10):e0001049. doi: 10.1371/journal.pdig.0001049. eCollection 2025 Oct.
ABSTRACT
Return-to-play (RtoP) clearance after concussion typically involves single- and dual-task assessments that do not reflect the speed or complexity of sport. We developed R2Play, a dynamic multi-domain assessment tool for concussion. This study aimed to (1) demonstrate proof of concept for R2Play by evaluating alignment with design objectives (easy to use, fun, sport-like, clinically valuable, resource efficient, and flexible); and (2) document subsequent iterations to R2Play design. A multi-method evaluation was performed wherein clinicians were paired with youth to test R2Play together and complete separate semi-structured interviews. Quantitative metrics included the System Usability Scale (SUS), heart rate (HR), ratings of perceived exertion (RPE), assessment durations, and R2Play completion times, errors, and multi-task cost scores (changes in performance with the introduction of new challenges). Interviews explored perspectives on design objectives, analyzed using content analysis. Participants included five clinicians (n = 2 occupational therapy; n = 1 physiotherapy; n = 1 athletic therapy; n = 1 medicine) and 10 youth (ages 10-22 years). Assessments took 30-40 minutes despite minor technical challenges (e.g., unresponsive equipment). Clinician-rated usability was good-to-excellent (SUS = 81 ± 8.4; 95% CI: 73.6, 88.4) and youth reported that instructions were easy to follow. Moderate-to-high-intensity exertion was achieved (peak HR = 80 ± 11% age-predicted maximal; 95% CI: 77.4%, 88.5%). Multi-task cost scores reflected some aspects of hypothesized level demand loading. Clinicians described R2Play as potentially valuable to assess sport tolerance and enable rich observations of multi-domain skill integration. Tables were constructed to map study findings onto design iterations. This study supports proof-of-concept for R2Play, a new multi-domain concussion assessment tool, and identified areas for improvement, which has informed changes to the design of R2Play before broader evaluation among youth post-concussion.
PMID:41086191 | DOI:10.1371/journal.pdig.0001049