The Brain Injury Association of Canada endorses the Vancouver Charter on Skiing Safety

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The Vancouver Charter on Skiing Safety is based on skiing and snowboarding safety, which was approved in the context of the 2006 Turin Winter Olympic Games. The original Turin Charter was prepared by a panel of experts and specialists delegated by European governments who worked under the coordination of TOROC (Turin Organizing Committee), BE.PRA.S.A. (a project co-financed by the European Commission and the health authority of the Italian region of Veneto) and the Italian National Health Institute.

The Charter is not intended to lay down new legal rights. Rather, the aim of the Charter is to promote a safe, healthy and active sporting and recreational culture, and to make its principles visible to the public, citizens and institutions. The Vancouver Charter is officially endorsed by Dr. Perry Kendall, B.C. Provincial Health Officer, Dr. Patricia Daly, Chief Medical Health Officer of Vancouver Coastal Health, and Dr. Jack Taunton, Chief Medical Officer of the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games.

According to The Economic Burden of Injury in Canada 2009 report, all winter activities accounted for over 70,000 unintentional injuries in Canada with nearly 1,400 resulting in partial and permanent disability. These serious injuries total $400 million dollars in direct and indirect costs to the health care system, which combined are contributing to the social and economic burden of unintentional injuries.

In Canada, it is estimated that 87.5% of skiing and snowboarding deaths have been caused by a head injury. Traumatic brain injury, which has increased in recent years, has accounted for up to 88% of all fatalities at ski resorts. Children account for 67% of all ski related deaths. Research has demonstrated that ski and snowboard helmets are effective at preventing serious head injuries. It is estimated that nearly 50% of all skiing and snowboarding head injuries could be prevented by simply wearing a helmet.

The Vancouver Charter will be publicly released at the upcoming Put a Lid on It! – Forum on Winter Helmet Safety event scheduled for the afternoon of November 20th, 2009, at the Metropolitan Hotel, Vancouver. All those invited to endorse the charter are also invited to attend this event, information about which can be found at Safe Kids Canada. Following the Forum on Friday, November 20th, 2009, the Charter will also be posted online.

Should you have any questions regarding the Charter please contact Erik Cuzzolino, Manager of Government Relations and Public Policy at Safe Kids Canada.

Thank you in advance for your interest in helping promote safety in winter activities while simultaneously upholding Canada’s tradition of winter Olympic sporting excellence.

Helmet advocate wins Pashby Safety Fund Award

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© Copyright 2009, Whistler Question – Published November 13, 2009 – LOCAL NEWS – David Burke dburke@whistlerquestion.com

Richard Kinar Photo
Richard Kinar
A West Vancouverite who has been leading the charge for increased helmet use in the snowsports industry and improved brain injury prevention programs nationwide this week received a prestigious award recognizing contributions in the field.

Richard Kinar, a regular Whistler visitor and skier, on Saturday (Nov. 14) was to receive the Dr. Tom Pashby Safety Fund Award, which has been awarded annually since 2004 to “a Canadian who has made an outstanding contribution in the prevention of injuries in sports and recreation,” Pashby Fund officials said in a statement issued Friday (Nov. 13).

Kinar is a member of the board of the Brain Injury Association of Canada, which works to educate the public about the dangers of brain injuries and advocate initiatives and programs that help prevent them. He is also a member of the Canadian Standards Association’s (CSA) Ski Helmet Committee.

Kinar became involved in the initiative after he was told that the helmet his son was wearing at the time of a bicycle crash had saved his life.

A former professional freestyle skier, Kinar has been especially active in calling for the mandatory use of helmets by all skiers and snowboarders. Over the past few years Whistler Blackcomb and other resorts have stepped up helmet use — this season all children and youth participants in WB ski and snowboard school programs will be required to wear them, for example. Kinar, though, has persisted in his calls for helmets to be mandatory for all mountain users.

In an interview on Thursday (Nov. 12), Kinar pointed out that head injury is the No. 1 killer of males under the age of 35 in Canada and that preventable injury is the leading killer of young people. Canada ranks 27th out of the 29 Organization for Economic Development and Cooperation (OECD) countries in terms of money spent per capita injury prevention programs, he said.

Earlier this year, partly as a result of Kinar’s efforts, CSA officials released a set of design standards for snowsports helmets. But despite his efforts and those of others, the federal government has yet to enact Bill C-289, put forward by B.C. MP Dr. Hedy Fry. It would ban the sale of snowsports helmets that don’t meet CSA specifications.

“(Kinar) was most influential in getting the ski helmet standards passed,” said Dr. Pat Bishop, who chairs the CSA committee on safety equipment. “He convinced the British Columbia government to provide the funding for the CSA to develop the CSA standard.”

In addition to the cost human suffering, better helmet standards and more effective injury prevention programs could help save much of the $14.7 billion Canada’s health-care systems spend annually on treating preventable head injuries, Kinar said.

“It’s just so frustrating trying to get the message across that 90 per cent of this is preventable and predictable and that programs and initiatives need to be put in place to improve our standing in the world and protect our young people from these injuries,” he said.

“The political system here has completely ignored the leading killer of our kids, and parents don’t know it.”

The Pashby Award, which comes with a $10,000 cheque, is “recognition for all the work I’ve been doing for all these years, and it recognizes that I’m bringing in the right message to our political leaders,” Kinar said.

“This, hopefully, will help leverage some more opportunities to talk about sports injury prevention.”

© Copyright 2009, Whistler Question
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Helmet Safety Guide – Canadian Living December 2009

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Please note an article titled “Helmet Safety Guide” which is featured in the December issue of Canadian Living, p. 85 – 88. BIAC, Harry Zarins and Richard Kinar were consulted by the magazine when preparing the article. This is another good example of increased visibility and continued efforts to educate the public in injury prevention. Please circulate widely.

From Canadian Living Magazine – December 2009
Helmet Safety Guide - Canadian Living

Through raw determination, his fiancée’s love and modern neuroscience, Captain Trevor Greene is learning to walk again almost four years after an axe attack

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Slow, but staggering progress
By Anne McIlroy, From Saturday’s Globe and Mail

His voice is raspy, the words come slowly. Trevor Greene says it is because he no longer has the reflex to breathe before he speaks, so he has to remind himself constantly to take in air while he talks.

Yet that he speaks at all, let alone in front of large crowds, as he did in Toronto this week, defies the grim prognosis that doctors described to his fiancée, Debbie Lepore, when he was in a coma after suffering a horrific brain injury almost four years ago. One physician told her to put him in a long-term-care home. She told herself, “They didn’t know Trevor.” She was right.
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Yvan Teasdale and Harry Zarins Address Parliamentary Finance Committee

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On Thursday, November 5th, Yvan Teasdale and Harry Zarins headed to Parliament Hill to address the House of Commons Standing Commitee on Finance (FINA) on their pre-budget consultations. There were a variety of groups that presented their wants to the committee from the forestry industry to research groups to a regional group. In a very limited period of time, we did indicate the need for the government of the day to recognize the importance of clearly delineating a strategy for Brain Injury Survivors and Prevention.

Read our Brief.

West Vancouver’s Richard Kinar to receive $10,000 Dr. Tom Pashby Sports Safety Award

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Media Release
Friday, November 13, 2009 FOR NOON RELEASE
Presentation at West Vancouver Community Centre on Saturday, November 14 at 12:30 p.m.
Spirit Room | 2121 Marine Drive | West Vancouver | BC | V7V 4Y2 | 604 921-3411

Read the full Press Release

NeuroMatters Connecting YOU to the Research Issue 8

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Fall 2009, Issue 8
In this issue

  • Community of Practice
  • Conference Notes
  • Seeking Answers
  • What’s Happening Right Now
  • We Can Work It Out
  • Work Readiness Evaluation Model
  • Get It Right

NeuroMatters Connecting YOU to the Research-Issue 8 (pdf)

Call for Abstracts – 7th Satellite Symposium on Neuropsychological Rehabilitation in Krakow, Poland, July 5-6, 2010

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The “Neuropsychological Rehabilitation Special Interest Group” of the World Federation for NeuroRehabilitation (WFNR) is asking to visit

“The 7th Satellite Symposium on Neuropsychological Rehabilitation”.

This conference will be held in Krakow, Poland, on 5th-6th July 2010, immediately following the International Neuropsychological Society Mid-Year Meeting, being also held in Krakow (www.the-ins.org).

Prof. Barbara Wilson (UK, convenor) and Prof. James Malec (USA, program chair) are inviting all professions working in the field of neuropsychological rehabilitation.

See program: http://pdf.koenigundmueller.de/kurs/FB100705A.pdf

See call for abstracts: http://www.koenigundmueller.de/call-for-abstracts-Krakow2010.doc

All talks and posters will be published in “Brain Impairment”. We are happy to see you in Krakow!

Please spread this email among your members, thank you!
Best regards,
Gerhard Müller and Team
Dipl.-Psych.
International Academy of Applied Neuropsychology
Semmelstr. 36/38
97070 Würzburg
Germany
Tel: +49 931 46079033
Fax: +49 931 46079034
http://www.koenigundmueller.de

On the right course with us!

Impact: Pathways Ahead, Our October 2009 Newsletter

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In this issue:
BIAC Conference- page 1
Message from the editor- page 2
Message from the President- page 3
Waterloo-Wellington HOO- page 3
Executive Director Message- page 4
Bursaries Awarded to Students- page 4
Ontario Happennings- page 5
SBIA Walk- page 5
Ian on the Rails- page 5
Ski Helmet Regulations- page 6
Nfld/Labrador Happenings- page 6
News from Nova Scotia- page 7
PEI Happenings- page 8
Winnipeg HOO- page 8

Our October 2009 Newsletter Impact – Pathways Ahead (pdf-735 kb)

Read past copies in the Brain Train Newsletter Archive

A Rally in Support of Care Givers In honour of Caregivers’ Week in Quebec (Nov. 2-8)

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