VCU to host 25th Annual International Brain Injury Conference
Virtual reality and protable assist devices to be demonstrated
Laura Arbogast
(804) 828-6604
s2lmarbo@titan.vcu.edu
6/5/2001
RICHMOND, Va. – Thirty years ago, Virginia Commonwealth University was one
of only a handful of institutions worldwide studying the effects and treatment
of traumatic brain injury. As pioneers in neuroimaging and comprehensive
long-term care for brain-injury patients, VCU researchers have aided in a
dramatic decline in mortality rate.
In 1976, VCU’s Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation sponsored
the inaugural Williamsburg International Traumatic Brain Injury Conference to
bring more focus to this field. Now the oldest conference of its kind in the
world, this year’s meeting will be held June 7-10 at the Williamsburg
Marriott, 50 Kingsmill Road, and will present researchers from across the United
States as well as from Denmark and Scotland.
"VCU has made a long-standing commitment to focusing on brain injury and
rehabilitation," said Jeffrey Kreutzer, Ph.D., conference chair and
director of the VCU Division of Rehabilitation Psychology and Neuropsychology.
"We are saving more lives. Our challenge now is to find ways to provide
long-term help to the many persons who might not have survived 10 years
ago."
"An Historic Event in an Historic City" is this year’s theme that
will feature presenters who attended the first meeting in 1976. Bryan Jennett,
M.D., professor of neurosurgery at the University of Glasgow, Scotland, will
review how far the field has come in his June 7 presentation on "The
Evolution of Traumatic Brain Injury Research."
New technologies for treating patients also will be demonstrated. Maria
Schultheis, Ph.D., a clinical research scientist at the Kessler Medical
Rehabilitation Research and Education Corp. in West Orange, N.J., will present a
device that uses virtual reality to assess the driving abilities of brain-injury
patients. Another group of scientists will demonstrate the use of new portable
electronic devices that can enhance brain function following an injury.
Other conference presentations will include:
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"Sports Concussion: From Dings to Dementia" by Jeffrey T. Barth,
Ph.D., chief of medical psychiatry/neuropsychology, University of Virginia.
-
"Retraining Social Skills after Traumatic Brain Injury" by Rick
Parente, Ph.D., professor of psychology, Towson University.
-
"Using Food Preparation and Meals Therapeutically" by Kimberly
P. Damon, O.T.R., and Tonya E. Henley, M.S., VCU Rehabilitation and Research
Center.
Co-sponsors of the event include the International Brain Injury Association,
the Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Program, the National Institute on
Disability and Rehabilitation Research and the John Jane Brain Injury Center.
VCU also hosts the National Resource Center on Traumatic Brain Injury, an
online resource for patients and physicians that provides the latest information
on new research, medications and procedures.
- About VCU and the VCU Medical Center
Virginia Commonwealth University is a major, urban public research university with national and international rankings in sponsored research. Located on two downtown campuses in Richmond, VCU enrolls more than 32,000 students in 211 certificate and degree programs in the arts, sciences and humanities. Sixty-nine of the programs are unique in Virginia, many of them crossing the disciplines of VCU’s 13 schools and one college. MCV Hospitals and the health sciences schools of Virginia Commonwealth University compose the VCU Medical Center, one of the nation’s leading academic medical centers. For more, see www.vcu.edu.