
About Brain Injury
Statistics
In the UK around one million people attend hospital every year
as a result of brain injury; of these:
- about one hundred and fifty thousand will have a minor brain
injury resulting in unconsciousness for 15 minutes or less.
Usually they recover completely within 3-6 months.
- around ten thousand will suffer moderate brain damage causing
unconsciousness for up to 6 hours. Some will still have physical
and psychological problems after 5 years.
- up to eleven thousand will suffer severe brain injuries and be
unconscious for 6 hours or more. Of these, only about 15% will
return to work within 5 years. Many will not work again and around
4,500 will require full time care for the rest of their lives.
- more than one hundred and twenty thousand people in the UK are
currently suffering from the long-term effects of severe brain
damage caused by head injury. This number is increasing every
year.
Causes of Brain Injury
Brain injuries (including stroke and other neurological
conditions) strike people of all ages, from all walks of life and
in a variety of situations. Due to enhanced knowledge and treatment
more people are surviving than ever before making brain injury the
fastest growing cause of disability among young people in the
UK.
Did you know that:
- 49% of all brain injuries are as a result of road traffic
accidents.
- 20% of brain injuries in children are caused by cycling
accidents. Wearing a cycle helmet reduces the risk of severe head
injury by up to 88%.
Other causes of brain injury are:
Traumatic
- Domestic and industrial accidents
- Sport and recreation
- Assaults
- Surgical intervention
Hypoxic
- Following cardiac arrest
- Hypoglycaemic coma
- Epilepsy
- Drug overdose
Post Viral Infections
The brain and its functions

Common problems after brain injury
Brain injury is often known as the "hidden disability" because
the problems which arise are not always obvious to another person.
Other people can see and often understand the limitations caused by
a physical disability, but difficulties with thinking skills and
behavioural changes are often misunderstood.
Some of the common problems are:
- Difficulties with attention and concentration
- reduced tolerance to background noise
- Memory problems
- forgetting what has been said
- forgetting people's names
- difficulties in learning new skills
- difficulty remembering familiar routes
- Relationship difficulties - resulting from
- physical changes
- personality changes
- change of role in family
- Behavioural problems
- reduced ability to judge appropriate behaviour
- impulsiveness
- lack of motivation
- loss of confidence
- reduced ability to control anger
- Reduced executive function
- Inability to carry out simple tasks
- problems with planning and sequencing
- Mobility problems
- difficulty with balance
- difficulty with co-ordination
- spacial awareness difficulties
- Fatigue - caused by
- sleep disturbances
- extra effort needed to carry out simple tasks
- Speech problems
- word finding
- understanding what is said
For more information on these symptoms or other aspects of brain
injury please go to Headway UK.
Head Injury (the facts) - All the information you need
straight from the experts.
"Head Injury" is a publication written by
leading authorities in the field of neurological illness, working
at the Oxfordshire Centre for Enablement. Headway Oxford is
particularly well served by having a number of these specialist
directly involved with our organisation and as such, we recommend
this book as a concise and clear guide to
understanding acquired brain injury. If you would like to
purchase a copy, please contact Headway UK.
Rehablilitation
Headway has had its own statement regarding rehabilitation since
the late 1980's:
'Rehabilitation is a process of change through which a brain
injured person goes, seeking to regain former skills and to
compensate for skills lost. Its aim is always to achieve the
optimum levels of physical, cognitive and social competence
followed by integration into the most suitable environment.'
The greatest visible progress occurs in the first 6 months,
after which improvement is often more subtle and less obvious. But
it is important to bear in mind that progress does not stop after 2
years, as has been suggested in the past. Rather people continue to
improve even 5, 10 or more years after a head injury.
Rehabilitation has two stages, the first being the formal
intervention to improve the individual, and the second stage is
when the family and carers work to maintain that improvement.
Research suggests that patients who make the best recovery are
those whose family is actively involved, and can maintain this
informal rehabilitation at home.