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How many Americans are hospitalized for nonfatal brain injuries?

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How many Americans are hospitalized for nonfatal brain injuries?
Photo by Unseen Histories / Unsplash

Traumatic brain injuries that don't kill people can still change their lives, often leading to lasting problems with thinking, memory, or mood. A new report has taken a broad look at how many of these nonfatal injuries are serious enough to land people in the hospital across the United States.

The report focuses on hospitalizations, which means these were significant injuries requiring medical care. It gives us a sense of how widespread this health issue is nationally. However, the report doesn't provide specific numbers or details about who these patients are, what caused their injuries, or what happened during their hospital stays.

Because this is an observational report, it can't tell us what's causing these hospitalizations to happen or how to prevent them. We also don't know how these patients recovered after leaving the hospital. The findings serve as an important reminder that brain injuries are a major public health concern, even when people survive them.

What this means for you:
Nonfatal brain injuries send many Americans to the hospital, but we need more details.
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