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May 15th @ 7:00pm - May 15th @ 10:00pm
Bands For Brains YouTube Page
Bands For Brains
Bands for Brains is a virtual fundraiser concert to raise money for brain injury research. The concert takes place on May 15, 2021 at 7 p.m. EST on the Bands for Brains YouTube channel. Please note that even though this concert is ticketed, it is free to attend! Remember that it is also a fundraiser, and donations are greatly appreciated!
Register and gain access to the show HERE
The event is organized by Riley, a high school junior from the greater Baltimore, Maryland area. Riley is not only a music lover, but has a personal experience regarding brain injuries. Riley’s mom acquired a traumatic brain injury in 2015, and she remains in a minimally conscious state. All revenue that this event creates will be going directly to the Brain Injury Association of Maryland. Bands for Brains will feature performances from Sarchasm Dogbreth, Pleasure Venom, Old Eastern, and Flamango Bay. All the bands
Not long after Elizabeth Kenney woke up from a months-long coma after she and a group of her friends were plowed over by a car while walking home from a bar in Oregon, she was transported to the Crotched Mountain Specialty Hospital in.
Black collegiate-athletes found to have lower concussion symptom knowledge than White counterparts
Among collegiate football players and other athletes, Black athletes recognize fewer concussion-related symptoms than their White counterparts, reports a study in the May/June issue of the
Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation
(JHTR). The official journal of the Brain Injury Association of America, JHTR is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer. Despite NCAA concussion education requirements for athletes, Black collegiate-athletes were found to have lower concussion symptom knowledge than White collegiate-athletes, according to the new research by Jessica Wallace, PhD, MPH, LAT, ATC, of University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, and colleagues. The study also finds racial differences in the sources of concussion symptom knowledge.
Michigan s no-fault reform could hurt those who need rehabilitation; advocates push for fix
Advocates desperately push for legislative fix before new no-fault fee schedule takes effect July 1.
and last updated 2021-05-07 23:36:50-04
LANSING, Mich. â The no-fault auto insurance reforms passed in Michigan in 2019 had an unintended side effect: They cut money for specialized rehabilitation services.
Now advocates and families are desperately working to get new legislation passed before the change takes effect.
Prior to 2019, Michigan required that auto insurance provide unlimited lifetime medical coverage for people seriously injured in accidents. That helped to support rehabilitation service providers across the state.