- thinking and reasoning,
- understanding words,
- remembering things,
- paying attention,
- solving problems,
- thinking abstractly,
- talking,
- behaving,
- walking and other physical activities,
- seeing and/or hearing, and
- 2,685 deaths;
- 37,000 hospitalizations; and
- 435,000 emergency department visits.
- Individuals age 15 to 24 have the highest risk of TBI.
- Falls are the leading cause of TBI; rates are highest for children ages 0 to 4 years.
- The rate of motor vehicle-traffic-related TBI is highest among adolescents ages 15 to 19 years.
- Child abuse is the cause of 64% of all infant head injuries
- Approximately 1 in 500 school-age children each year receive a head injury severe enough to be hospitalized
- 1 million children sustain a head injury each year
- 165,000 children will be hospitalized due to a head injury
- 1 in 10 of those children hospitalized will suffer moderate to severe impairments
Source: Langlois JA, Rutland-Brown W, Thomas KE. Traumatic brain injury in the United States: emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and deaths. Atlanta (GA): Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Nation Center for Injury Prevention and Control; 2006.
Kraus, J. F, and MacArthur, D. L. (1996) Epidemiologic Aspects of Brain Injury. Neurologic Clinics, 14(2): 435-450.

1 comments:
interesting... i never realy knew.
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