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The U.S. Social Security Administration has requested the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine establish an ad hoc committee to conduct a study to review the latest published research and science and produce a report addressing the diagnosis, prognosis, recovery, and late effects of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in children and adults. The committee will focus its report on TBIs that cause more than a minimal impact on long-term functioning but that are not so severe as to result in a persistent vegetative state or a similar permanent, complete, and obviously observable loss of functional abilities.
Description
An ad hoc committee of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine will conduct a study to review the latest published research and science and produce a report based on published evidence (to the extent possible) and professional judgment (where published evidence is lacking) addressing the diagnosis, prognosis, recovery, and late effects of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in children and adults. In addressing the following objectives, the committee will focus their report on TBIs that cause more than a minimal impact on long-term functioning but that are not so severe as to result in a persistent vegetative state or a similar permanent, complete, and obviously observable loss of functional abilities.
The committee’s report will:
- Describe the current healthcare landscape for the diagnosis and treatment of TBI and its symptoms for adults and children, including traditional or emerging uses of imaging, biomarkers, diagnostic signs, physical and mental rehabilitation therapies, alternative or self-guided treatments, and recent changes in best practices;
- Explain the classification of TBIs (e.g., mild, moderate, or severe), the variation within those classifications, and the implication of classification on prescribed medical care, prognosis, and rehabilitation potential;
- Describe the typical course of medical care and recovery after a TBI, including diagnosis and categorization of the injury, prognosis, rehabilitation, release from care, and long-term follow up;
- Explain, for each phase of TBI recovery, the typical symptoms, signs, complications, and functional impact seen during the phase and the implications those findings have for the patient’s future medical and functional status;
- Explain how TBI affects the long-term trajectory of an individual’s mental and physical functioning, including:
- Impact on the acquisition of normal age-appropriate skills in children;
- Impact on the progression of normal age-related functional decline in adults; and
- Changes in sensitivity to subsequent injuries or illnesses;
- Describe any limitations or exacerbations associated with the late effects of TBI that are uncommonly experienced or not consistently recognized by medical providers as causally linked to a previous TBI, and what evidence the medical community uses to show such a connection;
- Describe any special considerations or alterations in long-term recovery expectations for:
- Mild TBIs (or concussions) compared to severe or life-threatening TBIs;
- A one-time TBI compared to repeated TBI events experienced by a single person; and
- Individual’s receiving rehabilitation services when provided immediately after recovery from acute injury compared to when provided in a delayed fashion (more than one month after recovery from acute injury);
- Explain current approaches to the identification and diagnosis of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) or traumatic encephalopathy syndrome (TES) in living individuals and special implications such a diagnosis has for prognosis and care;
- Describe the durability of functional improvements seen from rehabilitation in an individual with TBI and what characteristics of the individual or their injury contribute to that durability; and
- Describe the circumstances in which deficits resulting from a TBI can return or worsen following completion of prescribed rehabilitation services, including signs, symptoms, and laboratory values commonly observed in proximity to such late exacerbations.
The report will include findings and conclusions but not recommendations.
Contributors
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Comment on Provisional Committee Appointments
Viewers may communicate with the National Academies at any time over the project's duration. In addition, formal comments on the provisional appointments to a committee of the National Academies are solicited during the 20-calendar day period following the posting of the membership and, as described below, these comments will be considered before committee membership is finalized. We welcome your comments (Use the Feedback link below). Please note that the appointments made to this committee are provisional, and changes may be made. No appointment shall be considered final until we have evaluated relevant information bearing on the committee's composition and balance. This information will include the confidential written disclosures to The National Academies by each member-designate concerning potential sources of bias and conflict of interest pertaining to his or her service on the committee; information from discussion of the committee's composition and balance that is conducted in closed session at its first event and again whenever its membership changes; and any public comments that we have received on the membership during the 20-calendar day formal public comment period. If additional members are appointed to this committee, an additional 20-calendar day formal public comment period will be allowed. It is through this process that we determine whether the committee contains the requisite expertise to address its task and whether the points of views of individual members are adequately balanced such that the committee as a whole can address its charge objectively.
Sponsors
Social Security Administration
Staff
Carol Spicer
Lead
Elizabeth Ferre
Eliana Pierotti
Joe Goodman