CDC Presentation
Download
Report
Transcript CDC Presentation
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
Congressional mandates and authorizations
Response to Congress
TBI Model Systems
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
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
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
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
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
Reauthorization of the TBI Act of 2008
Collaboration between civilian and military registries
Determine the incidence of TBI and prevalence of TBIrelated 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
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
Thank you
For more information please contact Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
1600 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30333
Telephone: 1-800-CDC-INFO (232-4636)/TTY: 1-888-232-6348
E-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 Control
Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention