Medical Support in the Team

Regatta sailing is high-performance sport under extreme conditions: hours of hiking, sudden gusts, tight maneuvers on deck and little room for error. Thoughtful medical support within the team is therefore not a luxury, but a prerequisite for safety, performance and the long-term health of the crew. Whether an Olympic squad boat, club regatta or long-distance offshore project – teams that integrate medicine, prevention and emergency management in a structured way reduce downtime and protect athletes from avoidable injuries.

This guide explains how teams organize medical support: from the sailing medical examination through physiotherapy to the emergency plan at sea.

Why medical support in a sailing team is essential

Sailing stresses the entire body: hiking loads the back and core, trapeze work demands the shoulders, tacking maneuvers strain the knees. Cold, sun and dehydration add further stress. Without medical support, complaints are often ignored – until they lead to absences.

Effective medical support in the team pursues three goals simultaneously:

  1. Prevention: Avoiding injuries through screening, training and adapted load management.
  2. Acute care: Fast, structured response to accidents on board or in the harbor.
  3. Rehabilitation: Targeted return to sailing after injuries without jeopardizing the season plan.

In professional teams, a fixed medical network is standard. Club crews also benefit when at least one person has first aid competence and the skipper clearly regulates medical responsibility.

Medical support network in a sailing team

Level 1
Team doctor / sports physician – examination, clearance, return-to-sport, specialist coordination
Level 2
Physiotherapist – prevention, treatment, load management
Level 3
First aid officer on board – acute care, medication management
Level 4
Every crew member – self-awareness, duty to report complaints

External partners complement the network: emergency services, harbor doctor and hospital. Prevention (green), acute care (orange) and emergency escalation (red) form three clearly separated levels of medical organization.

Roles and responsibilities in the crew

Medical support does not begin only at the moment of an accident, but with the clear assignment of roles. Every crew should know who decides in an emergency, who provides first aid and who handles radio or phone contact with the rescue chain.

Team doctor and sports physician

At performance level, teams work with physicians experienced in sailing medicine. They conduct the sailing medical examination, assess suitability for competition and long-distance sailing, support return-to-sport after injuries and coordinate specialists when needed (orthopedics, cardiology, dermatology for sun damage).

Physiotherapy and athletic support

Physiotherapists are the backbone of prevention. They identify muscular imbalances, treat overuse injuries early and develop individual exercise programs. Close integration with physical fitness and land training on hiking benches is crucial for sustainable performance.

Medical officer on board

On the boat itself, a designated person with a current first aid certificate is needed (SRC motor or equivalent, plus specific sailing experience). The skipper bears overall responsibility for safety decisions – including medical decisions to abandon the race or initiate medevac, as described in skipper responsibility.

Role
Typical holder
Main task
Relevant regatta level
Team doctor
External sports physician
Examination, clearance, return-to-sport
Olympics, professional, long distance
Physiotherapist
External or permanent staff
Prevention, treatment, load management
Performance sport to ambitious amateur
First aid officer
Crew member with certificate
Acute care on board, medication management
All levels
Skipper
Boat captain
Decision on race abandonment, medevac, safety
All levels
Coach / team management
Shore team
Coordination with medicine, training adjustments
Squad, youth, professional

Sailing medical examination as the foundation

Before an athlete participates in demanding regattas, a current sailing medical examination should be in place. It checks cardiovascular function, vision test, balance, load capacity and documents relevant pre-existing conditions. Details on the process and license requirements can be found in the sailing medical examination.

Important aspects for teams:

  1. Regular updates: Examinations are valid for a limited time; squad teams schedule renewals before the start of the season.
  2. Medication transparency: Crew members report prescription medications – relevant for anti-doping and emergency care.
  3. Individual risk factors: Asthma, diabetes, allergies or cardiac arrhythmias require adapted emergency plans.
  4. Offshore additional requirements: Long-distance regattas often have stricter cardiological criteria.

Important: The sailing medical examination does not replace ongoing support. It is the starting point – not the end – of medical team organization.

Prevention: avoiding injuries instead of treating them

Prevention is the most cost-effective form of medical support. Teams with systematic prevention have measurably fewer absences during championship series.

Physical preparation

Targeted strength and core training reduces back and knee problems during hiking. Exercises on hiking benches and specific sailing movement patterns should be integrated into the training plan. The loads during hiking and trapeze explain why one-sided gym programs are not enough.

Protective equipment and ergonomic decisions

Helmets, gloves, neoprene and padded hiking shorts are medical prevention tools. Missing protective equipment often leads to cuts, bruises and head injuries from the boom. An overview of materials and requirements is provided in clothing and protective equipment.

Load management and recovery

Overtraining during intensive regatta weeks (Kiel Week, world championship series) is a common cause of overuse injuries. Teams should:

  • Plan rest days and tapering before championships
  • Treat sleep and hydration as medical factors
  • Take pain seriously and not dismiss it as "normal"
  • Conduct physio screenings between race days

Injury risk in regatta sailing

35–40 %

Lower back

20–25 %

Knee

15–20 %

Shoulder / hand

5–10 %

Head / boom

Source: Sports medicine sailing studies and team experience.

Medical equipment on board

Every regatta boat needs adapted first aid equipment. The scope varies by boat class, course length and regatta notice of race.

Minimum equipment for inshore regattas

  • Dressing materials, sterile compresses, wound disinfectant
  • Elastic bandages, tape, scissors, tweezers
  • Cold packs (instant cold packs)
  • Sun protection, eye wash for contact with salt water
  • Life jackets in accordance with safety rules on the water

Extended equipment for offshore and long distance

  • Painkillers and personal medications (documented)
  • Seasickness medication and electrolytes
  • Emergency warmth (space blankets, dry clothing)
  • Satellite communication for medevac coordination
  • Defibrillator (AED) on shore and increasingly standard on larger yachts

Checklist: Basic medical equipment for regatta boat

  • First aid kit checked and dated
  • Personal medication list of all crew members
  • Emergency contacts (MRCC, harbor doctor)
  • Life jackets functional
  • Cold packs available
  • Sun protection and water reserve
  • Radio tested
  • Medical officer named and briefed

Emergency management: from injury to medevac

In an emergency, every second counts – and clear procedures prevent panic. Professional teams practice medical emergency scenarios just like man-overboard maneuvers.

Procedure for medical emergency on board

1
Recognize accident and secure boat
2
First aid by medical officer
3
Skipper decision – continue or abandon (escalation path)
4
Radio / phone – inform rescue coordination center
5
Medevac or harbor approach
6
Documentation and follow-up care

Typical emergency scenarios and responses

Man overboard with injury: Stop boat, recover person, hypothermia check, alert emergency services if unconscious.

Head trauma from boom: Keep person still, initiate medevac if consciousness is impaired.

Cuts: Stop bleeding; abandon race and seek help for severe bleeding.

Cardiovascular emergency: Use AED, begin CPR, prepare for rescue arrival.

Never continue a race if the injury could be life-threatening or the person is not conscious. Regatta results are irrelevant compared to medical safety.

Communication and team culture

Medical support only works when crew members report complaints openly. In high-performance teams there is sometimes a "push through" cultural pressure – which leads to serious injuries in the long term. Good teams establish:

  • Daily brief health checks before the start
  • Confidential conversations with physio and coach
  • Debriefings that also address physical strain (see team dynamics and conflicts)
  • Zero tolerance for concealing pain before championship races

Clear commands and radio discipline facilitate medical emergency communication. Structured on-board communication is covered in depth in communication on board.

Differences by regatta type and team size

Regatta type
Medical focus
Typical support
Special feature
Inshore / dinghy
Overuse, capsize, cold
Physio, first aid, safety boats
Fast recovery by support fleet
Keelboat fleet racing
Hiking, boom, hand injuries
Team doctor, permanent physio
Medicine often in shore team
Offshore / long distance
Seasickness, exhaustion, trauma
Full medical setup, telemedicine
Medevac planning mandatory
Club regatta
Basic care, prevention
First aid course holder in crew
External help via emergency services

Olympic squads and professional teams maintain permanent medical staff; amateur teams should at least maintain a written emergency plan and current emergency contacts for each regatta harbor.

Medical season planning

1
Sailing medical examination
2
Physio screening
3
Regatta block
4
Championship
5
Off-season rehabilitation

Integration into training and crew assembly

When assembling the crew, medical competence should be considered: a crew member with first aid training is as valuable as an experienced trimmer.

Training planning and medical support belong together: coordinate load phases with physio, consider injury history, plan recovery weeks.

Tip: Use regatta breaks for brief physio checks (5–10 minutes): shoulder, back, knee.

Legal and organizational aspects

The skipper bears responsibility for safety on board. Insurance (accident, liability, international health insurance) should be checked before the start of the season. Document incidents: course of accident, measures taken, handover to emergency services.

Checklist: Establishing medical support in the team

  • Sailing medical examination current for all crew members
  • Medical officer on board named and certified
  • First aid equipment checked and stocked for the specific boat
  • Written emergency plan (medevac, radio channels, hospital)
  • Personal medication and allergy list of all crew members
  • Physio contact or prevention program established
  • Protective equipment complete and worn (helmet, gloves)
  • Emergency scenarios practiced in the team (at least once per season)
  • Insurance coverage for regatta abroad checked
  • Communication rules for medical emergencies established

Conclusion

Medical support in the team is a holistic system of examination, prevention, equipment, emergency planning and open team culture. Those who take it seriously sail not only more safely, but also more competitively – because healthy athletes train more consistently and remain fully capable in decisive regatta moments. From the sailing medical examination to the medevac plan on offshore legs: every level of sailing benefits from clear medical organization.

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Last updated: July 4, 2026