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Demovictory9

(32,447 posts)
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 12:21 AM Mar 2022

The Hidden Epidemic of Brain Injuries From Domestic Violence

The Hidden Epidemic of Brain Injuries From Domestic Violence
Research shows that survivors of abuse can sustain head trauma more often than football players. But they are almost never diagnosed.


https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/01/magazine/brain-trauma-domestic-violence.html

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In Phoenix, finding work was difficult. The headaches had become debilitating. She wasn’t being hit in the head anymore, but the pain washed over her anyway. She would wake up in the middle of the night, nauseated from it. The ache in her mouth became intolerable, too, so she finally had every molar pulled.

She was also becoming increasingly forgetful. She would walk into a room to do something and then have to backtrack — sometimes several times — to recall why she was there. She lost her train of thought midsentence. After reading passages in a book, she had to reread them almost immediately to remember what they said. It always felt as if a blank wave, a nothingness, crashed over her brain. Life had become quieter, but her mind seemed worse. “When you leave, you think it’s going to be great,” she says. “And then you’re like, Why can’t I see straight?”

Nelly noticed the forgetfulness, too. A year after Becky fled, Nelly and her baby joined her in Phoenix. At first they lived out of Nelly’s car, and Becky drove her granddaughter around in the Arizona summer, air-conditioner blasting, while Nelly worked. Sometimes Becky and Nelly donated plasma — $50 each would get them a night at a motel. There were days when only the baby ate. They would eventually save enough money to rent a place in a quiet neighborhood; when Becky told the landlord about her ex-boyfriend, he put bars on all of her windows. Having lived apart from Becky for so many years, Nelly was startled by the way her mom told the same story multiple times, not remembering that she had already shared it, and constantly lost things after stowing them in unusual places.

One night, Becky Googled “domestic violence help” and came across a public-radio story about a local neurologist who treated women whose heads had been repeatedly battered. Dr. Glynnis Zieman worked at the Barrow Neurological Institute’s Concussion & Brain Injury Center in Arizona and treated professional athletes for mild traumatic brain injuries, also known as concussions. She also treated women like Becky.

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The Hidden Epidemic of Brain Injuries From Domestic Violence (Original Post) Demovictory9 Mar 2022 OP
Seems we're finding out hrad injuries have far more problems... TreasonousBastard Mar 2022 #1
i tried to convince a couple state legislators that there should be a box on school health forms mopinko Mar 2022 #2
Great idea. Delmette2.0 Mar 2022 #3

TreasonousBastard

(43,049 posts)
1. Seems we're finding out hrad injuries have far more problems...
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 02:28 AM
Mar 2022

than we thought. Military and sports health never wanted to look at it seriously and victims of violence got stuck behind them.

I have no problem believing women get the very short end of the stick and suffer worse trauma with often fewer resources.

But so often we hear about jail terms, as if more jail will solve the problems. It's part of the solution, but somewhere we have to look at a way to get these guys to stop beating up their wives and girlfriends. And that maniac who went after a woman he didn't know with a baseball bat the other day needs treatment, before even thinking about criminality. Lock him up for the safety of the community, but in something besides jail.

mopinko

(70,077 posts)
2. i tried to convince a couple state legislators that there should be a box on school health forms
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 10:11 AM
Mar 2022

asking about head injuries and concussions. how many kids w learning disabilities have just had their heads bashed too many times?
seems like one way for a doc to open up the subject.

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