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The dangers of concussion
Friday, 10 August 2012 13:52
It's always unsettling watching a game of rugby and seeing a player take a nasty knock to the head.
But it's an occupational hazard of nearly all contact sports. Every year thousands of cases of concussion are going undiagnosed and untreated. Playing sport again before you've recovered from concussion can cause long term brain damage.
Nick Rushworth is the Executive Officer at Brain Injury Australia is trying to raise awareness of the dangers of concussion.
Head impacts, concussions may speed up brain's natural aging process
Wednesday, 08 August 2012 07:56
Researchers in America have studied subtle changes in students who have suffered a concussion. Although the research subjects appeared unaffected, comparison with subjects who had not experienced a concussion revealed “changes in gait, balance and in the brain's electrical activity, specifically attention and impulse control”. Brain scans also showed the non-concussed group had significantly greater electrical activity. They described the ‘slow traffic’ in the brains of concussed as a kind of accelerated ageing but advised readers not to be anxious about this as many other factors may be at work in the patterns they have seen.
Want to find out more? Go to the source at News Medical.
Brain Injury Awareness Week 2012 - Press Release
Monday, 06 August 2012 15:47
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 6 AUGUST 2012
THIS WEEKEND THOUSANDS OF AUSTRALIANS
WILL GET CONCUSSED PLAYING SPORT.
AND IT WILL GO UNTREATED, UNDIAGNOSED,
UNREPORTED AND UNRECOGNISED.
BRAIN INJURY AWARENESS WEEK BEGINS MONDAY 13 AUGUST
Every year in Australia more than 3,000 people are hospitalised after being
concussed playing sport. Triple that number won’t seek medical attention. And
as many as ten times that number won’t even report their concussion to
teammates, coaches or family because they may fear being removed from play. Or
they don’t even know they’re concussed. Nine out of ten people hospitalised with
concussion don’t recognise the injury. Returning to sport before the brain has
recovered puts the player at risk of long-term brain damage.
Jeremy Wilcox knows this risk all too well. He was concussed 15 times playing
competition Rugby Union in the Australian Capital Territory, 9 times in just the
last three years of his career. And those are just the ones he can remember. “I was
often completely oblivious to being concussed. I just kept on playing. And the more I
got concussed, the more normal it felt,” says Wilcox. “I probably ended up in hospital
about 3 or 4 times”. These days, Jeremy’s short-term memory isn’t what it
should be for a man in his early forties. He has also lost his sense of taste and
smell. He’s the Secretary Manager of the Australian Capital Territory’s Rugby
Union Club (and while he still loves to cook, he gets his staff to taste the food).
“We just don’t take concussion seriously enough in this country,” says Sports
Medicine Australia’s Dr. Rob Reid, Australia’s leading concussion educator.
“As a result, ignorance is widespread. I reckon that most people still believe
you’ve got to pass out to be concussed, or that wearing padded headgear is
going to prevent a concussion. We urgently need a national concussion
education program for everyone involved in sports – from administrators to
coaches, from players to parents. That’s why this Week is just so important.”
For this year’s Brain Injury Awareness Week, Brain Injury Australia wants everyone
involved in sport to know the “Five Rs” of concussion - Recognise the injury,
Remove yourself from play, Referral to a doctor, Rest and then Return to play.
For more information, or to arrange interviews with
Dr. Rob Reid, Jeremy Wilcox or Nick Rushworth, Executive
Officer, Brain Injury Australia, contact Nick on (0417) 373 622
Brain Injury Australia consultation on NDIS/NIIS
Monday, 06 August 2012 15:08
Brain Injury Australia in collaboration with the Brain Injury Association of NSW will facilitate a number of consultations in NSW during August 2012. These consultations will be targeted and focused on the Assessment and Eligibility for the National Disability Insurance Scheme/National Injury Insurance Scheme. You are invited to participate in this consultation, and background documents can be downloaded for your information.
For more information on dates, locations, etc, visit the Brain Injury Association of New South Wales website.
New clinical session at the University of Melbourne Eye Care clinic
Sunday, 05 August 2012 15:03
Nicholas Anderson commenced a clinical session at the University of Melbourne eye care clinic in August 2012. Final year Optometry students are also involved in some aspects of the consultations under Nicholas’ supervision.
The clinic is open to members of the public and in particular patients with acquired brain injury having visual concerns are encouraged to call our clinic for a consultation.
More Articles...
- 6000 a year injure brain in WA
- Keys to cut risk of injury
- Young men at greatest risk of brain injury after drinking
- Better management of traumatic brain injury
- A Smack to the Head
- Brain Injury Australia works to prevent brain injury in the construction industry
- BIA's 2010-2011 Annual Report
- New DVD Available
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