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Saving Lives and Protecting People:
Prevention of Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)

In the United States...

  • At least 3 people sustain a TBI every minute.1
  • Every 36 minutes, an adult aged 65 or older dies from a TBI.1
  • 5.3 million people live with disabilities caused by a TBI.6
  • In one year alone, TBIs cost Americans $76.5 billion in medical care, rehabilitation, and loss of work.7,8

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is in the news a lot these days: A football player injured in a tackle. A soldier disabled by an explosion. A child hospitalized as a result of shaking. An older adult injured in a fall.

TBI is a serious public health problem in the United States. Every year, 1.7 million people sustain a TBI.1


What is a TBI?

Photo: Two young boys wearing helmets with bikes

A TBI is caused by a bump, blow, jolt, or penetration to the head that disrupts the normal function of the brain.2 Falls are the leading cause of TBIs, especially among young children and older adults.1 Motor vehicle crashes, sports injuries, firearms or explosives injuries, and being hit by an object are other major causes.1,3,4 A concussion is a type of mild TBI.5

Putting Science into Action to Reduce Traumatic Brain Injuries

CDC’s National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (Injury Center) is committed to saving lives and protecting our nation from injuries and violence.

One of the Center’s focus areas is preventing and responding to TBI. The Injury Center works with partners to raise awareness of TBIs and ways to prevent them. The Center also helps health care providers, parents, coaches, and others respond quickly and appropriately when TBIs do occur to lessen the consequences of these injuries.

Identifying and Monitoring the Problem to Inform Prevention

Awareness Improves Prevention & Treatment

Photo: girl bouncing a soccer ball off her head

Between 2001 and 2009, increased awareness about TBI caused a rise in emergency department visits for sports- and recreation-related TBI among youth, especially young boys.7 Greater awareness can lead to better prevention and treatment. As of 2011, more than 350,000 coaches, parents, and health care professionals have completed the Injury Center’s Heads Up concussion education online training courses.

Protecting Children and Teens from TBIs

Heads Up Coaches Training Makes the Difference

Photo: Teenage wrestlerAfter Cole, a Memphis high schooler, sustained a concussion during wrestling practice, his doctor told him to sit out until he had been medically cleared. But Cole went back to practice a week later.

Right away, Cole’s coach noticed something was wrong. Cole seemed to be clumsy and stunned, and he was having trouble answering questions and remembering things. Having been through the Injury Center’s Heads Up: Concussions in Youth Sports online training and posted Heads Up posters in locker rooms, the coach knew these were red flags. He sent Cole to the athletic trainer, who removed him from practice and helped his mom make an appointment for Cole to see a neurologist the next day. The neurologist believes this quick recognition and response saved Cole’s life.

“My coach learned to recognize the symptoms of a concussion from these CDC materials,” says Cole. “I am grateful for these posters and trainings.”

Helping Medical Professionals Improve TBI Treatment

Supporting State TBI Prevention Efforts

  • The Injury Center’s Core Violence and Injury Prevention Program funds state health departments to estimate the impact of TBIs and define the groups most affected. The resulting data are a powerful tool to ensure that a state’s TBI prevention activities are guided by the best available science and research.
  • Many states have been recently passing “return to play” laws to protect young athletes from deadly or disabling consequences of returning to play too soon after a TBI. CDC’s Heads Up materials help coaches and administrators comply with these laws. CDC is also working with states to evaluate these policies to ensure they achieve their intended impact. 

CDC’s Commitment to Prevention

The Injury Center is the only U.S. federal agency that deals exclusively with injury and violence prevention in non-occupational settings. It leads a coordinated public health approach to tackling this critical health and safety issue. 

The Injury Center is committed to continuing its work to help people prevent and respond appropriately to TBIs. Prevention, detection, and early response are the most effective, common-sense ways to improve health and lower societal costs for medical care and other negative effects related to TBIs. Our priority is to equip states, communities, youth-serving organizations, coaches, health care providers, and parents with the best science, tools,  and resources so that they can take effective action to prevent TBIs and improve outcomes.

Join us in making injury and violence prevention the premier public health achievement of the next decade!

For more information about concussions and other traumatic brain injuries, and the tools listed in this fact sheet, visit www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury, and Like us on Facebook, www.facebook.com/cdcheadsup.

Learn More

 

References

  1. Faul M, Xu L, Wald MM, Coronado VG. Traumatic brain injury in the United States: emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and deaths. Atlanta (GA): Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control; 2010. Also see Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. How Many People Have TBI? [updated 2011 May 5; accessed 2011 Nov 1]. Available from: http://www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury/statistics.html
  2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Traumatic Brain Injury. [updated 2011 Oct 6; accessed 2011 Nov 25]. Available from: http://www.cdc.gov/TraumaticBrainInjury/index.html
  3. Champion HR, Holcomb JB, Young LA. Injuries from explosions. Journal of Trauma 2009;66(5):1468–1476.
  4. Gilchrist J, Thomas KE, Xu L, McGuire LC, Coronado VG. Nonfatal sports and recreation related traumatic brain injuries among children and adolescents treated in emergency departments in the United States, 2001-2009. MMWR 2011: 60(39);1337-1342.
  5. 5Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Concussion and Mild TBI. [updated 2011 Oct 6; accessed 2011 Nov 25]. Available from: http://www.cdc.gov/concussion/index.html
  6. Thurman D, Alverson C, Dunn K, Guerrero J, Sniezek J. Traumatic brain injury in the United States: A public health perspective. J Head Trauma Rehabil 1999;14(6):602-615.
  7. Finkelstein EA, Corso PS, Miller TR. The Incidence and Economic Burden of Injuries in the United States. New York (NY): Oxford University Press; 2006.
  8. Coronado VG, McGuire LC, Faul M, Sugerman D, Pearson W. The Epidemiology and Prevention of TBI (in press). 2012

 

 
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