Shattered Minds

A fall down the stairs, a blow to the head, a car accident — what happens to those who survive a traumatic brain injury? Will they ever recover completely? And most importantly, how can they be helped?

Shattered    Minds

“Three weeks before her eighth birthday our daughter was standing in front of our house waiting to cross the street when a car hit her. She flew eight feet in the air and hit the ground so hard her brain rattled in her skull ” relates Mrs. Fraidi Schwarz of Monsey. “My little brother ran into the house to tell me about the accident. I rushed to Gitty’s side. She was lying in a fetal position with just a tiny bit of blood. She looked so peaceful. I yelled to call Hatzolah.”

Gitty now 26 lives at home. She can answer simple questions and take part in limited conversations. She helps her mother peel vegetables and fold napkins. Gitty is not depressed or angry nor are her parents. This is not the journey they anticipated for Gitty but it is her life and they celebrate it.

 

Will She Ever Be Normal Again?

Gitty endured a traumatic brain injury (TBI) the leading cause of disability and death in children and adolescents in theUS. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention children from birth to four years old and those between 15 and 19 are at greatest risk. But in the blink of an eye TBI can happen to anyone. And when it occurs the ramifications are often severe.

“The brain has the consistency of formed Jell-O a soft mass housed by a hard skull with billions of nerve cells (or neurons) that interconnect and communicate ” explains Dr. Jessie Simantov medical director of Polytrauma and Traumatic Brain Injury for the James J. Peters VA Medical Center in the Bronx. “Damage to the brain potentially interferes with any function the brain controls.”

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