Should people with brain injuries drink alcohol or use drugs?

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In making your decision, consider the following eight points.

Falling Through the Cracks: New Study Reveals Majority of Toronto’s Homeless Have History of Brain Injury

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TORONTO, Oct. 7 /CNW/ – More than half of Toronto’s homeless have suffered a brain injury – and 70 per cent of those did so prior to ending up on the street – according to a landmark study published today.

“Sadly, this study proves our greatest fears,” says John Kumpf of the Ontario Alliance for Action on Brain Injury (OAABI). “In our society, people living with acquired brain injury do not get the community support they need, and they fall through the cracks.”

The study, published today in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, showed that 53 per cent of Toronto’s homeless report a history of traumatic brain injury. The study was authored by Dr. Stephen Hwang, research scientist at St. Michael’s Hospital, and Dr. Angela Colantonio, senior scientist at
Toronto Rehab.
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Traumatic brain injury is the leading cause of death and disability among youth

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Traumatic brain injury is the leading cause of death and disability among youth.

The three leading causes of death from traumatic brain injury relate to firearms, motor vehicles and falls. The leading causes of death differ by age group. Motor vehicles are the leading cause among youth from birth to 19 years of age. Firearms are the leading cause of death among persons aged 20 to 74 years. Falls are the leading cause of death among persons aged 75 and older.

You don’t have to lose consciousness to suffer a concussion

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You don’t have to lose consciousness to suffer a concussion – only 10% of individuals lose consciousness.

You don’t have to be knocked unconscious to sustain a brain injury. Mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI), also known as concussion , can damage your brain at the cellular level. Worse, repetitive head injuries, even minor ones, can have serious repercussions – including permanent brain damage or death.

After one brain injury, you are three times at a greater risk for a second brain injury and eight times greater for subsequent injuries

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After one brain injury, you are three times at a greater risk for a second brain injury and eight times greater for subsequent injuries.

After a TBI incident, the potential risk for subsequent multiple injury is extremely high. Statistics show that among people with a TBI incident, the risk of a second injury is two to three times greater than that of the general population; after a second injury, the potential for a third increases to eight times the normal average.

Males are twice as likely to sustain a brain injury

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Males are twice as likely to sustain a brain injury.

Outcome after TBI may differ in men and women because of gender-related behavioral patterns that cause the traumatic accident. There is a great deal of evidence that men, especially young men, engage in risk-taking behavior far more frequently than women. Men are more than twice as likely to be the driver in fatal car crashes and women are more likely to be the passenger in a car crash.

Men and women differ in safety-related activity such as using a seat belt or wearing a helmet. Women may experience worse outcomes after TBI because they are more likely to wear seat belts and helmets and perhaps the use of safety restraints changes the site of impact or increases the severity needed to cause an injury.

Doctors are calling brain injury a silent epidemic

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Doctors are calling brain injury a silent epidemic!

Traumatic Brain Injury is called the ‘Silent Epidemic” because the un-informed public is being ravaged by its devastating repercussions. According to the National Center for Health Statistics the total number of injuries to the head (of all types) in the United States is estimated to be in excess of 8 million per year. Put another way, every four seconds someone in the United States may suffer a degree of brain damage.

Most of those who are subjected to head injuries will not experience life-changing consequences because their injuries are not “traumatic.” Yet according to the National Brain Injury Association, every 6 minutes one of the 8 million will become permanently disabled from a brain injury that is truly traumatic. Before the age of 65, two out of every three Americans (66%) will have suffered a form of brain injury ranging from mild to severe.

According to State records each year in Colorado 3500 people are disabled from a brain injury and that rate of injury has been consistent for more than 15 years.