Concussion Prevention Program held at Elizabethtown Area High School

Sarah Jane Brain Foundation In The News
WHAT: Please join the Sarah Jane Brain Foundation for concussion prevention presentations at Elizabeth town Area High School. This program is a part of the Sarah Jane Brain Project’s national tour working to prevent and identify the number one leading cause of death and disability in American youth, brain injury. The program aims to promote awareness of concussions, in particular sports-related, and the dangers if not properly identified.

Shane Piper, Athletic Director for Elizabeth town High school, commented that the information provided was interactive and useful for the parents to go home and work with their kids and know what signs and symptoms to look for.

WHEN: Thursday, March 24th, 2011 (6:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.)
WHERE: Elizabethtown Area High School
Middle School Auditorium
600 East High Street
Elizabethtown, PA 17022
WHO: Leslie Mabry of the Sarah Jane Brain Foundation will present the concussion awareness multimedia program to students, coaches, and trainers.
WHY: This event is a part of The Sarah Jane Brain Project’s nationwide public awareness campaign dealing with brain injury, the leading cause of death and disability for America’s youth. The tour aims to bring awareness about youth sports concussions to high schools across the country as well as introduce the National Pediatric Acquired Brain Injury Plan (PABI Plan) through town hall meetings at local universities and hospitals.

The Sarah Jane Brain Foundation is one of the leading organizations in the country dealing with pediatric acquired brain injury (PABI), and its Advisory Board is comprised of over 200 leading experts from just about every major medical institution (from MD Anderson and Johns Hopkins to Mayo Clinic and Mount Sinai) and research university (from Harvard and Yale to UCLA and UNC) in the country. This Advisory Board created the National Pediatric Acquired Brain Injury Plan (PABI Plan) which develops a seamless, standardized, evidence-based system of care that is universally accessible for the millions of PABI families across the country.

PABI can be caused by trauma (motor vehicle crashes, child abuse, sports-related concussions, blast injury from war, falls, etc…) as well as non-trauma (strokes, brain tumors, meningitis, hypoxia, etc…). (PABI covers these brain injuries from birth through 25 years of age, due to the fact the adolescent brain is still developing until about 25 years.) According to statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), approximately 1.6-3.8 million new brain injuries occur every year in America due to trauma in sports and recreational activities. More than 767,225 American youth visit the Emergency Department due to traumatic brain injuries each year, 80,715 are hospitalized and over 11,200 die. These numbers do not reflect the many more that do not enter a hospital, are not diagnosed or are caused by non-trauma. Upwards of 80% of the children in our juvenile detention centers across America have some form of a brain injury, most of which have not been identified or treated.

NOTES: This event is open press. Interviews will be available prior to and following the event.