Big Island Thieves

State of Hawaii Lights Up Prevention, Awareness and Education During Brain Injury Awareness Month.

Every year about 12,000 people in Hawai‘i go to an emergency room seeking treatment for a brain injury and approximately 1,300 are hospitalized. Brain injuries can happen to anyone and often cause significant changes in the ability to think, communicate, move, and regulate emotion. To bring attention to this serious public health concern, David Y. Ige and City and County of Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi proclaim March 2021 as Brain Injury Awareness Month. For a week starting this Sunday, March 14, 2021, Honolulu Hale will be lit up in blue, the Brain Injury Association of America’s (BIAA) recognized color of brain injury awareness.

The Neurotrauma Program in the Hawaii Department of Health (DOH) Developmental Disabilities Division encourages everyone to learn more about preventing and healing brain injuries by participating in activities available at: https://health.hawaii.gov/nt/news/bia2021/.

Participants can:

According to Mary Brogan, the DOH Developmental Disabilities Division Administrator, “Having a brain injury can be like living with someone you met a long time ago. Pieces of yourself are there but some are missing, and other pieces don’t fit together nicely. It can feel like your brain belongs to someone else. We hope the community can learn more about how to keep their loved ones safe and prevent brain injuries, especially at home, where a high percentage of brain injuries occur through falls and other incidents.”

Additional educational materials can be accessed and downloaded through BIAA at biausa.org/raiseawareness. BIAA’s March awareness campaign “More Than My Brain Injury” aims to de-stigmatize the injury, highlight the diversity of the brain injury community, and empower survivors.

Here are some quick prevention techniques that everyone can do to avoid or minimize a traumatic brain injury:

For additional information and resources for individuals with traumatic brain injury, please call Hawai‘iʻs Neurotrauma Helpline at (808) 733-2155 or (833) 333-5133 or visit our Neurotrauma Program website at http://health.hawaii.gov/nt/.

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