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Traumatic Brain Injury in Ohio

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Title: Traumatic Brain Injury in Ohio


1
Traumatic Brain Injury inOhio
  • Program provided by
  • Ohio Brain Injury Program and Advisory Committee
  • Rehabilitation Services Commission

2
THIS PROGRAM MAY BE COPIED AND DOWNLOADED IN ANY
FORMAT. HOWEVER, THE CONTENT OF THIS PRESENTATION
MAY NOT BE ALTERED.
3
Objectives
  • Define brain injury
  • Give epidemiological data
  • Summarize neuropathology of TBI
  • Describe functional impacts commonly associated
    with TBI
  • Physical
  • Behavioral
  • Communicative
  • Impact on family
  • Outline programs available in Ohio

4
(No Transcript)
5
Definition of Traumatic Brain Injury (Individuals
with Disabilities Education Act)
Traumatic brain injury means an acquired
injury to the brain caused by an external
physical force, resulting in total or partial
functional disability or psychosocial impairment,
or both, that adversely affects a childs
educational performance. The term applies to open
or closed head injuries resulting in impairments
in one or more areas, such as cognition
6
language memory attention reasoning abstract
thinking judgment problem-solving sensory,
perceptual, and motor abilities psychosocial
behavior physical functions information
processing and speech. The term does not apply
to brain injuries that are congenital or
degenerative, or brain injuries induced by birth
trauma. Federal Register, Vol. 57, No. 189,
Tues., 9/29/92
7
A Typical Day in the USA
  • During a three hour period today
  • 684 Americans will experience a TBI (5479/day)
  • 17 Americans will die from a TBI (137/day)
  • Most of these newly injured Americans will be
  • young children
  • young adults ages 1825
  • elderly adults over age 65
  • Vehicle crashes will account for nearly 50 of
    all these TBIs

8
In Ohio by Midnight Tonight
  • No one will be able to accurately report the
    number of persons who experienced a TBI today due
    to a lack of a TBI registry. However, based on
    national incidence and prevalence statistics, it
    is estimated that
  • 30 Ohioans will have suffered a TBI today and
    will be counted as one of the 196,047 other
    Ohioans who are living with long term
    disabilities as a result of a TBI

9
  • 5 Ohioans will have died today due to a TBI
  • 11 Ohioans injured today will be under 22 years
    old
  • Statistics compiled by Ohio Legal Rights Service

10
National Facts and Figures
  • 100/100,000 Annual national rate of TBI
  • 272,000 Americans who experience a TBI each
    year
  • 52,000 Americans who die due to TBI
  • 5,300,000 People in US with long-term
    disabilities as a result of a TBI
  • 25 Percent of TBIs classified as moderate
    or severe

11
  • 30 Percent of individuals with TBI eligible
    for Medicaid
  • 1825 Ages when most TBIs occur
  • 20 Mortality rate for TBI in USA
  • 50 Percent of TBIs related to vehicle crashes
  • 34 Percent of all injury deaths in USA due to
    TBI
  • 10 Percent of all individuals with disabilities
    in USA who have a TBI
  • 20 Percent of individuals with TBI resulting
    from violence-related incidents

12
Ohio Information About TBI
  • 11,174 Estimated number of new incidences of
    TBI /year in Ohio
  • 17.7 Mortality rate for TBI in Ohio in 1996
  • 1982 Number of Ohioans who die of TBI each
    year
  • 7768 Number of Ohioans who are hospitalized
    each year due to TBI
  • 25903330 Number of Ohioans who are disabled
    each year due to TBI

13
  • 74 Number of Ohioans each year who persist
    in vegetative state due to TBI
  • 196,047 Number of people living in Ohio with
    long term disabilities as a result of TBI
  • 38 Percentage of individuals who receive a
    TBI prior to age 22
  • Statistics compiled by Ohio Legal Rights Service

14
Neuropathology of TBI
  • The brain is a gelatin-like substance vulnerable
    to outside trauma. The cranium protects the
    brain against trauma, but does not absorb impact
    forces.
  • During concussion, the brain rotates and twists
    inside the skull, causing damage to brain tissue

15
Two Primary Mechanisms of TBI
  • Acceleration/Deceleration Example A quarterback
    falls to the ground and hits the back of his
    head. The falling motion propels the brain
    against the skull.

16
Acceleration/Deceleration
from Traumatic Brain Injury, Interactive
Therapeutics, Inc. c.1988, rev. 1999.
17
Rotational
Example When a football player is tackled, his
head may strike an opponents knee this contact
to the head can cause a rotational motion.
18
Rotational
from Traumatic Brain Injury, Interactive
Therapeutics, Inc.,c.1988 rev. 1999
19
Vulnerable Tissues
  • Gray Matter of the Brain
  • Neurons, residing in the gray matter, are single
    cells that use chemical reactions to create
    electrical currents to carry out activities
  • The gray matter is the site of processing,
    integration and memory
  • Children are especially vulnerable
  • Learning is affected by problems with integration
    and memory

20
Vulnerable Tissues
  • White Matter of the Brain
  • Nerve cells are connected by axons (long
    projections of nerve cells resembling insulated
    wiring) which connect neurons to other neurons

21
Functional Impacts of TBI
  • Impaired mobility
  • Impaired body functions
  • Impaired sensory experiences
  • Impaired communication
  • Impaired cognitive functions

22
Functional Impacts of TBI
  • The experience, injury, and associated outcomes
    for each TBI survivor are complex and unique.
    Each case must be treated on an individual basis
    viewing and treating the survivor and family (and
    other support persons) based on findings.

23
Functional Impacts of TBI
  • Impaired Mobility
  • Paralysis (partial or full)
  • Spasticity
  • Balance
  • Gait

24
Functional Impacts of TBI
  • Impaired Body Functions
  • Swallowing difficulties
  • Temperature control
  • Changes control of body functions (bowel and
    bladder, sexual functioning, hunger)

25
Functional Impacts of TBI
  • Impaired Sensory Experiences
  • Vision
  • Hearing
  • Smell
  • Taste
  • Touch

26
Functional Impacts of TBI
  • Impaired Communication
  • Speaking
  • Expressing thoughts and ideas
  • Understanding language
  • Decreased everyday use of language

27
Speaking Impacts
  • A 22 year old male with severe slurring of speech
    and drooling. He is unable to be understood by
    anyone outside his immediate family. He uses a
    word communication book and an electronic device
    to be understood and to use the phone.

28
Expressing Thoughts and Ideas
  • An 18 year old female with moderate word finding
    and sentence structure problems. Listeners
    require several repeats of the message to
    understand what she intends.

29
Understanding Language
  • A 17 year old male with injury to the temporal
    lobes needs many repeats, restatements and visual
    aids to understand simple directions and
    comments.

30
Decreased Everyday Use of Language
  • A 19 year old college freshman has such a
    struggle and is so self-conscious about her
    speech, that she rarely attempts to express her
    thoughts and ideas. She is thought to be aloof.

31
Functional Impacts of TBI
  • Impaired Cognitive Functions
  • Attention/Concentration
  • Memory
  • Decision making
  • Executive functioning
  • Organization
  • Judgment

32
Attention
  • A man is unable to complete a task at work in a
    reasonable amount of time. He is distracted by
    the activities and noises around him.

33
Memory
  • A woman is unable to recall information given to
    her about carpooling plans for the coming week to
    her daughters school.

34
Decision Making
  • When shopping at a local department store, a man
    is unable to weigh the pros and cons of buying
    one of two expensive tools - and therefore,
    purchases both.

35
Executive Functioning
  • A woman is unable to plan and structure her day
    at the office and, therefore, completes nothing
    during the day.

36
Organization
  • A student has difficulty following the class
    schedule of assignments and class attendance. He
    is unable to organize his time and efforts.

37
Judgment
  • A man went out and bought two cars in the same
    day at different car dealerships. He bought one
    for himself and one for his son. He knew he
    bought two cars, but he was unable to determine
    that he could not afford them.

38
Psychological Impacts of TBI
  • Depression (survivor, family, friends)
  • Lower threshold for frustration
  • Anger, tantrums, and mood swings
  • Impulsivity and distractibility
  • Loss of former identity
  • The Invisible Disability

39
Invisible Disability
  • Many times individuals recover physically, but
    continue to have cognitive problems which are not
    easily recognized by the general public.

40
Social Impacts of TBI
  • Impact on the family members (parents,
    siblings, caregivers)
  • Isolation for the child and family
  • Loss of friends and peer support
  • Transportation barriers
  • Accessibility issues

41
Family Needs Feelings
  • Difficulty in processing the impact of the
    injury on the family member and the family as a
    whole
  • Need to hear information repeatedly
  • Need to have written information for later use

42
Family Needs Feelings
  • Fatigue
  • May require respite care
  • Isolation
  • May benefit from support groups, information
    sources
  • Frustration
  • May need time alone
  • May need the opportunity to vent

43
Family Needs Feelings
  • Specific service needs for the family and
    survivor
  • Refer to Ohio Brain Injury Association, local
    social service agencies, local school district

44
Domains of Assessment
  • Intellectual
  • Attention/Concentration
  • Memory
  • Language
  • Motor
  • Behavior
  • Family

45
Community Reintegration Impacts
  • School
  • Vocational
  • Leisure
  • Friends

46
SchoolWhen a Child is Injured
  • In the hospital
  • Keep local school district informed
  • Contact hospital social service for assistance
    with insurance, Social Security Disability,
    Medicaid
  • Develop a plan for school reintegration while in
    the hospital

47
SchoolWhen a Child is Injured
  • Reintegration to the community (home and school)
  • Developmental issues
  • The brain is still developing, therefore, brain
    pathways and connections may or may not occur
  • Problems in learning can emerge years later as
    developmental milestones are missed
  • Child on achievement tests performs at age level
    after injury but may not demonstrate new learning

48
SchoolWhen a Child is Injured
  • Academic challenges
  • Learning memory, language, integration of
    information, problem solving, organization
  • Behavior frustration, intolerance,
    distractibility, impulsivity, attention

49
SchoolWhen a Child is Injured
  • Reintegration to school
  • Establish hospital to school communication
  • Contact early
  • Contact often
  • Transfer records among all facilities
  • Include parents in all communication

50
SchoolWhen a Child is Injured
  • When there are concerns about school planning
  • Contact the director of special education in your
    local school district
  • Contact one of the 16 Ohio Special Education
    Regional Resource Centers (SERRC) for additional
    information and assistance
  • Contact Ohio Resource Center for Low Incidence
    and Severe Handicaps (ORCLISH) for special
    assistance with a severely injured child

51
Service Providers Within the Continuum
  • Community Integration
  • Psychological service providers
  • OT, PT, and Speech Pathologist
  • Assistive technology specialist
  • Special educators

52
Service Providers Within the Continuum
  • Respite providers
  • Transitional housing providers
  • Independent Living Center advisors
  • Vocational Rehabilitation assessors and
    counselors

53
Ohio Resources
  • Ohio Brain Injury Association (OBIA)1335 Dublin
    Rd Ste 217DColumbus OH 43215-1000614-481-7100He
    lpline 800-686-9563

54
Ohio Resources
  • Ohio Brain Injury Program and Advisory
    CommitteeRehabilitation Services Commission400
    E Campus View Blvd SW4Columbus OH
    43235-4604614-438-1340

55
Ohio Resources
  • There are numerous governmental Ohio State
    Departments that can help. Contact the
    appropriate ones as needed. A list of departments
    and phone numbers is in the handout

56
National Resources
  • Brain Injury Association (BIA)105 N Alfred
    StAlexandria VA 22314703-236-6000
  • Website http//www.biausa.org

57
National Resources
  • Brain Injury Resource Center8737 Colesville Rd
    Ste 950Silver Spring MD 20910301-650-8080
  • Website www.tbigrants.com

58
National Resources
  • National Information Center for Children and
    Youth with Disabilities (NICHCY)PO Box
    1492Washington DC 20013-1492800-695-0285
  • Website http//www.nichcy.org

59
Websites of Interest
  • http//www.tr.wou.edu/tbi/index.html
  • Oregon Teaching Research will provide articles
    and information regarding specific topics in TBI
  • http//www.sasquatch.com/tpn/AZHIF.html
  • Arizona BIA provides information and referral for
    families

60
Websites continued
  • http//www.sped.ukans.edu.spedprojects/tbi/TBIHOME
    PAGE.html
  • The TBI project is funded by the Kansas State
    Board of Education and provides inservice and
    preservice to educators and related service
    personnel

61
Websites continued
  • http//www.tbi.pmr.vcr.edu
  • This NIDRR TBI model system provides lists of
    experts, answers to frequently asked questions
    and several links to other sites on TBI,
    including one to Virtual Assistive Technology
    Center (free or inexpensive software for people
    with disabilities)
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