Calling TBI as a "headache" is as typical as it is damaging: "common symptoms of mTBI...are often associated with other conditions or dismissed as transitory, making identification and appropriate diagnosis challenging." Farmer et al, 2016, p. 2.https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR844.html …
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RAND also found that "Unpaid caregiving for individuals with TBI is most often provided by a spouse, parent or other blood relative[.] Depression among family caregivers occurs four times more frequently than in the general population." https://www.rand.org/pubs/external_publications/EP67398.html …
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RAND found that roughly 1 in 5 of the 2.8 million servicemembers that have deployed since 2001 suffer from TBI, but a shortage of skilled healthcare workers have made treatment harder.https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_briefs/RB9981z2.html …
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So, no.
#TBI isn't a headache. And we demean and damage those we put in harm's way by describing it as such.Prikaži ovu nit
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Important to note that TBI isn't a RAND thing, it's a medical thing. There's zero debate in the medical literature about what TBI is, symptoms/signs/longterm sequelae. Grandmas get it too. It's like diabetes, a medical problem. A big, bad severe one.
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