Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center News Release
WASHINGTON, Jan. 23, 2014 – The Defense and Veterans Brain
Injury Center has released new clinical recommendations to help service members
who have sustained a mild traumatic brain injury, otherwise known as
concussion, to progressively return to their normal activities following their
injury.
These clinical recommendations are available for military
and civilian health care professionals. The recommendations can be downloaded
from DVBiC’s website.
“The Progressive Return to Activity Following mTBI Clinical
Recommendations are the first of its kind and are tailored for primary care
managers and rehabilitation providers. These recommendations offer a
standardized medical approach for service members who have sustained a mTBI to
return to activity in a manner which facilitates optimal recovery,” said Army
Col. Sidney Hinds, II, DVBIC national director. “We created these clinical
recommendations because of a need identified by our Armed Services and Veterans
Affairs stakeholders. The mTBI patient was our focus and we vetted these
recommendations with our stakeholders before publication.”
These guidelines were developed with input from academic
experts, sports concussion clinicians and military TBI experts and will assist
health care providers as they monitor patients recovering from concussion.
“These recommendations will further improve and standardize
the care provided to patients with mild TBI and offer them useful information
to become more actively involved in their recovery,” said Navy Capt. Richard
Stoltz, the director of the Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological
Health and Traumatic Brain Injury.
Since 2000, more than 287,000 U.S. service members have sustained
a traumatic brain injury. These injuries have occurred both in training and
combat. Eighty-three percent of TBIs are mild TBIs, making it the most common
form of brain injury for U.S. Armed Forces personnel.
“DVBIC has more than 20-years’ experience in researching,
treating and developing clinical guidance for TBI patients. Our work benefits
not only military medicine, but the entire medical community as well,” said
Hinds, who is board certified in neurology and nuclear medicine.
The Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center is part of the
U.S. Military Health System. It is the TBI operational component of the Defense
Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury.
No comments:
Post a Comment