public health response to traumatic brain injury

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Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury Jeneita Bell, MD, MPH Medical Officer LCDR, USPHS Commissioned Corps National Center for Injury Prevention and Control Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention

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Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury. Jeneita Bell, MD, MPH. Medical Officer LCDR, USPHS Commissioned Corps. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control. Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention. Overview. History of CDC TBI Surveillance - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury

Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury

Jeneita Bell, MD, MPHMedical Officer

LCDR, USPHS Commissioned Corps

National Center for Injury Prevention and ControlDivision of Unintentional Injury Prevention

Page 2: Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury

Overview

History of CDC TBI Surveillance Congressional mandates and authorizations Response to Congress TBI Model Systems

Page 3: Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury

CDC's Traumatic Brain Injury Surveillance Program

1989 — promoted development of a multistate TBI surveillance program Federal Interagency Head Injury Task Force Report Funding and technical assistance Colorado, Oklahoma, Missouri, and South Carolina

1995 — published Guidelines for Surveillance of Central Nervous System Injury Ensure valid and timely information Define the data elements necessary to describe

TBI Core elements readily available to most State

health departments

Page 4: Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury

The Traumatic Brain Injury Act of 1996

Develop a uniform reporting system Research effective strategies for preventing

TBI Implement public information and education

programs Provide technical assistance to public

entities Authorized at $3 million for fiscal years

1997–1999

Page 5: Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury

CDC Response – TBI Act of 1996

Report to Congress on TBI -1999 Incidence Prevalence of TBI TBI-related disability

TBI surveillance systems funded in 19 states

Follow-up studies Colorado and South Carolina

Page 6: Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury

TBI Act Amendments of 2000

Signed as Title XIII of the Children’s Health Act of 2000

Implement national education campaign Fund States or their designees to operate a

TBI registry Determine the incidence and prevalence of

TBI in all age groups in the general population

Determine the incidence and prevalence of mild TBI

Page 7: Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury

CDC Response – TBI Act Amendment of 2000

CDC Heads Up program (2004) TBI-related deaths, hospitalizations, and ED

visits Funded states to link rehabilitation and

social services CDC Mild TBI Work Group

Future of registries State-based CDC surveillance systems as

registries Report to Congress (2003)

South Carolina studies of TBI among prisoners

Page 8: Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury

Reauthorization of the TBI Act of 2008

Collaboration between civilian and military registries

Determine the incidence of TBI and prevalence of TBI-related disability

Report national trends in TBI Identify common rehabilitation

interventions Identify interventions that can prevent or

remediate secondary neurologic conditions Develop practice guidelines TBI

rehabilitation

Page 9: Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury

CDC Response –Reauthorization Act of 2008

Reports to Congress Military (DoD, VA, NIH) Civilian (NIH and Expert panel of research

scientists)

TBI-related deaths, hospitalizations, and ED visits, 2002–2006 Demographic characteristics External cause of injury Trend data

Interagency Agreement Department of Education, National Institute of

Disability and Rehabilitation Research TBI Model Systems

Page 10: Public Health Response to Traumatic Brain Injury

Thank you

For more information please contact Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

1600 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30333Telephone: 1-800-CDC-INFO (232-4636)/TTY: 1-888-232-6348E-mail: [email protected] Web: http://www.cdc.gov

The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

National Center for Injury Prevention and ControlDivision of Unintentional Injury Prevention