[19] It has been translated into other languages including Spanish,[20] Italian (alongside the version 14 update)[21] and Catalan.
[22] In October 2019, the IOC hosted a 3-day consensus meeting in Lausanne, Switzerland to provide a standard method to report injuries and illnesses in sport.
[23] At this meeting, the expert panel recommended that OSICS should be rebranded as OSIICS to also reflect the importance of illness in sport.
[24] The IOC recommendations have since been adopted by golf, tennis, cycling and parasport [25] and national datasets such as that of the Australian Institute of Sport.
OSIICS is almost exclusively used within the domain of professional and elite sport—with a high take-up in the field of sports medicine.