Close X
Thursday, December 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Online Tool Educates Teachers To Help Kids Returning To School After Concussion

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Apr, 2016 12:39 PM
    VANCOUVER — Teachers across Canada can now get advice from a new program to help students returning to school after a concussion.
     
    The online Concussion Awareness Training Tool was developed by sports injury specialist Dr. Shelina Babul at BC Children's Hospital.
     
    Babul says the resource is the first of its kind to provide recommendations about how students can adjust at school after a blow to the head.
     
    Other components of the program have already been used by medical professionals, parents and coaches dealing with children who have suffered a brain injury that can lead to headaches, nausea, dizziness and confusion.
     
    Babul says symptoms can occur immediately or days after an injury, with the most serious cases causing brain damage or even death if left unrecognized, though 85 per cent of concussions can be resolved after about two weeks with proper management.
     
    She says teachers and parents often question when it's safe for a child to return to school after a concussion and the online tool was created to help educate them on how to help a child quickly get back to their usual routine.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Assisted Death Should Be Available In All Publicly Funded Hospitals'

    'Assisted Death Should Be Available In All Publicly Funded Hospitals'
    The memo from management at Providence Health Care, which operates 10 facilities, says that while the organization currently forbids the practice, it will monitor and conform to the law as it takes shape.

    'Assisted Death Should Be Available In All Publicly Funded Hospitals'

    Poor Maintenance Led Tug To Sink On B.C. Coast, Says Transportation Safety Board

    Poor Maintenance Led Tug To Sink On B.C. Coast, Says Transportation Safety Board
    The tug, called the Syringa, sank north of Merry Island when it took on water while towing a barge on March 18, 2015.

    Poor Maintenance Led Tug To Sink On B.C. Coast, Says Transportation Safety Board

    New Canadians Lean On Court Comments To Disavow Citizenship Oath To Queen

    New Canadians Lean On Court Comments To Disavow Citizenship Oath To Queen
    Emboldened by comments from Ontario's highest court, a tiny but determined group of new, and not-so-new, Canadians have been publicly disavowing the oath to the Queen they were forced to take to become citizens.

    New Canadians Lean On Court Comments To Disavow Citizenship Oath To Queen

    Growing Own Pot Is Like Making Homebrew, Says Canada's Largest Medical Marijuana Producer

    Growing Own Pot Is Like Making Homebrew, Says Canada's Largest Medical Marijuana Producer
    Canada's largest publicly traded producer of medical marijuana is making the case for the quality of weed made by large-scale manufacturers compared to homegrown bud.

    Growing Own Pot Is Like Making Homebrew, Says Canada's Largest Medical Marijuana Producer

    La Loche Will Need Years To Heal From High School Shooting: NDP MP

    NDP MP Georgina Jolibois says it will take years for the community of La Loche to heal from the shootings last month that left four dead and seven others wounded.

    La Loche Will Need Years To Heal From High School Shooting: NDP MP

    Export Development Canada Earmarks $750 Million To Help Oilpatch Firms

    Mark Senn, regional vice-president for Western Canada, says that could take the form of loans or guarantees.

    Export Development Canada Earmarks $750 Million To Help Oilpatch Firms