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Riley Hospital Tops in Addressing Traumatic Brain Injury

06/05/2009

Riley Hospital among nation's top healthcare institutions collaborating to address traumatic brain injury

Riley Hospital for Children named State Lead Center for Indiana - One Lead Center named for each state plus the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico

INDIANAPOLIS – Riley Hospital for Children has been named the State Lead Center for the state of Indiana by the Sarah Jane Brain Project (SJBP) as part of a national network of healthcare institutions in what is being called the largest collaborative effort in the history of medicine. Riley Hospital, in conjunction with 51 other institutions, will work together to address the number one cause of death and disability for children and young adults in the United States – brain injury.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates the financial burden of pediatric brain injury to cost over $12 billion a year, and also reports that for children aged 14 and under, there are 2,685 deaths, 37,000 hospitalizations and 435,000 emergency room visits attributable to traumatic brain injury annually. In addition, the World Health Organization reported that twice as many children suffered a brain injury than received stitches in 2008.

The mission of the SJBP is to create a model system for children suffering from all pediatric acquired brain injuries. And in January 2009, the SJBP brought together more than 60 of the top pediatric neurologists in the country and together, they drafted the first-ever national Pediatric Acquired Brain Injury (PABI) Plan that calls for the development of a seamless, standardized, evidence-based, national system of care universally accessible for all children/young adults and their families regardless of where they live in the country.

An open application period was held for children's hospitals, research universities and other healthcare organizations to apply to become the State Lead Centers in their respective states and implement the PABI Plan. Then, a selection committee consisting of seven well-known brain scientists and rehabilitation experts across the country reviewed the applications and selected one institution in every state, plus one each in the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, as the institution most capable of being the State Lead Center for their state.

As the State Lead Center, Riley Hospital will be responsible for developing the master plan of acute care for children/young adults with brain injuries in the entire state of Indiana.

Riley Hospital was further designated as the Mid-Central Region's Lead Center for acute care, responsible for leading all the other states in the region consisting of Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin.

"We are so honored to have Riley Hospital for Children as the State Lead Center for Indiana and as part of this national network of the best healthcare institutions in the country," said Patrick Donohue, SJBP founder. "It is shocking to realize that despite brain injury being the leading killer and disabler of our children, nothing has ever before been done to develop a nationally standardized medical or even an educational plan to address it, and there is very little public awareness exists of pediatric brain injury."

Donohue started the SJBP in October 2007 after his daughter Sarah Jane was shaken by her baby nurse, causing a severe brain injury.

The National PABI Plan will address seven categories of care for each aspect of brain injury treatment – prevention, acute care, rehabilitation, adult transition, rural/telehealth, mild traumatic brain injury and the virtual center – and is estimated to cost $125 million annually to implement across the country.

The SJBP's National Advisory Board made the announcement today at an 11 a.m. press conference on Capital Hill.

National Pediatric Acquired Brain Injury State Lead Centers

State

State Lead Center

Alabama

The University of Alabama at Birmingham / The Children's Hospital of Alabama

Alaska

The Children's Hospital at Providence

Arizona

Barrow Neurological Institute / St. Joseph Hospital and Medical Center

Arkansas

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

California

Mattel Children's Hospital UCLA

Colorado

University of Colorado Denver and Health Sciences Center / The Children's Hospital

Connecticut

Yale-New Haven Children's Hospital

Delaware

Nemours / Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children

District of Columbia

Children's National Medical Center

Florida

University of Miami Miller School of Medicine

Georgia

Children's Healthcare of Atlanta

Hawaii

Center on Disability Studies at The University of Hawaii

Idaho

Idaho State University / Institute of Rural Health

Illinois

The University of Illinois at Chicago

Indiana

Riley Hospital for Children / Indiana University School of Medicine

Iowa

University of Iowa Children's Hospital / Center for Disabilities and Development and Child Health Specialty Clinics

Kansas

Center for Child Health and Development / University of Kansas Medical Center

Kentucky

University of Kentucky Hospital

Louisiana

Louisiana Health Care Quality Forum

Maine

Maine Institute of Human Genetics and Health

Maryland

Kennedy Krieger Institute

Massachusetts

Children's Hospital of Boston and Harvard Medical School

Michigan

Michigan Public Health Institute and Brain Injury Association of Michigan

Minnesota

Mayo Clinic

Mississippi

Children's Rehabilitation Services / Blair E. Batson Hospital for Children

Missouri

Saint Louis Children's Hospital

Montana

Montana State University Billings / Montana Center on Disabilities

Nebraska

Madonna Rehabilitation Hospital

Nevada

Sunrise Children's Hospital

New Hampshire

Dartmouth Medical School

New Jersey

Brain Injury Association of New Jersey

New Mexico

University of New Mexico School of Medicine

New York

Mount Sinai

North Carolina

The Clinical Center for the Study of Development and Learning / University of North Carolina School of Medicine

North Dakota

Awaiting Application

Ohio

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

Oklahoma

Oklahoma State University / Center for Health Sciences

Oregon

Teaching Research Institute and Western Oregon University

Pennsylvania

Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh

Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico Medical Center / University of Puerto Rico

Rhode Island

Hasbro Children's Hospital Child Protection Program

South Carolina

Medical University of South Carolina

South Dakota

Center for Disabilities / Sanford School of Medicine of The University of South Dakota

Tennessee

University of Tennessee

Texas

Center for BrainHealth / The University of Texas at Dallas

Utah

University of Utah

Vermont

The Vermont Center for Children, Youth and Families at the University of Vermont

Virginia

UVA Children's Hospital and Kluge's Children's Rehabilitation Center

Washington

University of Washington / Harborview Medical Center

West Virginia

West Virginia Brain Injury Association

Wisconsin

Children's Hospital of Wisconsin

Wyoming

Brain Injury Association of Wyoming

CONTACT:
Margie Smith-Simmons
317.985.8749
msmithsi@clarian.org

About Riley Hospital for Children As one of the nation's leading pediatric hospitals and Indiana's first and only comprehensive hospital dedicated exclusively to the care of children, Riley Hospital for Children, a part of Clarian Health, has provided compassionate care, support and comfort to children and their families for 85 years. Each year, Riley Hospital and Riley Hospital at Clarian North serve over 215,000 inpatients and outpatients from across Indiana, the nation and the world. Riley Hospital's partnership with Clarian Health, and its strong affiliation with the Indiana University School of Medicine, makes it the only comprehensive clinical resource for Indiana's children and the premiere source for health-related information for their parents. From simple care associated with the health and wellness of children and less complex specialty care to the most critically-ill and medically complex cases, Riley Hospital for Children is a national leader. Clarian Health operates the Methodist Hospital, Indiana University Hospital and Riley Hospital for Children campuses as a single hospital under Indiana law. Visit Riley Hospital for Children for more information.

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