2277 Highway 36 West, Suite 200 Roseville, MN 55113-3830
Phone: 612-378-2742
Toll Free: 1-800-669-6442
Fax: 612-378-2789
E-Mail:info@braininjurymn.org
Hours: Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
About Traumatic Brain Injury
For twenty-five years, the Minnesota Brain Injury Alliance has worked to enhance the lives of those living with the effects of brain injury through advocacy, support and empowerment. When the brain is injured, an individual can undergo a seemingly infinite variety of changes: physical, cognitive, emotional and functional. Each brain injury is unique to the person living with it and affects not only the person who sustained the injury but everyone that person comes in contact with throughout their daily life. Whether family, friends, employees, customers, or professionals, brain injury touches everyone.
Which makes Brain Injury Awareness Month so important. Understanding the causes and effects of brain injury helps build bridges of awareness between the estimated 100,000 Minnesotans living with brain injury and the community at large. This awareness allows for smoother transitioning of people with a brain injury back into public life.
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) occurs when an outside force results in a disruption of the brain's normal functioning. This can be the result of a sudden starting or stopping, as in whiplash, the head being struck, as in a fall, or an object piercing the brain. Today, falls are the leading cause of brain injury in Minnesota with automobile accidents taking a close second. Brain injury can result in a wide variety of physical and cognitive changes including reduced memory skills, an alteration of self-perception and a decrease in judgment. Hearing, vision or speech may be impaired and fatigue may increase as well as anxiety, an inability to suppress impulses, decreased self-esteem and difficulty relating to others.
Because the results of a brain injury can be so wide-spread, a support network is a must for all people affected. The Minnesota Brain Injury Alliance exists to help build that support network. The Association reaches out to individuals as soon as they leave the hospital, providing them and their loved ones with one-on-one support through Resource Facilitation and educational opportunities and helps them develop the skills to become self-advocates.
The brain, unlike a bone or a muscle, cannot grow new cells to replace damaged tissue, but, in some cases, it can be rehabilitated or taught to relearn functions lost from the injury. The Alliance works to cultivate a world where people with brain injury are able to realize their full potential. For more information, please contact the Minnesota Brain Injury Alliance at 612-378-2742 or 800-669-6442.