Playgrounds aren't
always fun and games according to a new study. Researchers found that children
are increasingly being diagnosed with traumatic brain injuries after a run-in
with playground equipment.
Researchers from the
National Center for Injury Prevention and Control looked at injury rates for
kids under 14 from 2005 to 2013 and determined that there was a significant
increase in children going to the emergency room for traumatic brain injuries.
Boys accounted for 58.6 percent of the TBIs identified while 50.6 percent of
children between the ages of five and nine had injuries, according to a study
published today in the Pediatrics Medical Journal.
Most
playground-related TBIs were associated with monkey bars and swings, according
to researchers.
The authors theorize
that the rise in injuries can be attributable to two reasons: increased
playground time for kids and increased awareness among parents and doctors
about the dangers of head injuries.
"It is also
plausible that heightened public awareness of TBI and concussions has prompted
parents to seek medical care for their children in the event of a head injury,
when previously they would not have done so," the authors wrote.
The authors stress
that most children do not have long-lasting injuries, with the overwhelming
majority of these pediatric patients, 95.6 percent, were treated and released
from the hospital without further care.
The authors did,
however, suggest steps that could help lower TBI rates.
"Improvements in
playground environmental safety that also address design, surfacing, and maintenance
can help accomplish this," the study authors said.
Dr. Oscar
Guillamondegui, director of the Vanderbilt Multidisciplinary Traumatic Brain
Injury Clinic at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, said the study wasn't
particularly surprising but it could be useful for health officials.
"It brings up some really important points…kids are still
getting hurt," said Guillamondegui. "We have no baseline to determine
what the rate of dramatic brain injury is…[this]
gives us a number to focus on."
Guillamondegui said
the increased rate of traumatic brain injury may just be the start of
understanding the long-term impacts of these injuries, which can put people at
increased risk for anxiety, depression and various cognitive disorders years
later.
"Most people are
still not attuned to the fact that something major could have occurred, they
shake it off and don’t go to ER…those are the unseen trauma," he said.
Dr. Jerri Rose, a
pediatric emergency room physician at University Hospitals Case Medical Center,
said concerned caregivers should take children to the emergency room if they
had a head injury. The warning signs of a serious head injury include
persistent vomiting, lethargy, change of behavior or loss of consciousness.
"Many of those
children turn out to be ultimately fine, it would be best to consult with physician,"
said Rose.
"I think it’s an
important study that the numbers are increasing, I’d still applaud kids for
being healthy and active," she added. Children should play "on safe
equipment" as "they’re being supervised."
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