Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Browser Cache

This website has recently undergone changes. Users finding unexpected concerns may care to clear their browser's cache to ensure a seamless experience.

Medical Museum Hosts Annual Brain Awareness Day Program

Image of Medical Museum Hosts Annual Brain Awareness Day Program. National Museum of Health and Medicine Neuroanatomical Collections Manager Archibald Fobbs describes different parts of the brain to visitors during the annual Brain Awareness Day program on March 16, 2024, in Silver Spring, Maryland. (DOD photo by Ian Herbst)

Traumatic brain injuries, one of the invisible wounds of war, affect many in the military and civilian populations. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 1.7 million people sustain TBIs annually, and since 2000, over 490,000 service members have sustained a TBI.

During this year’s Brain Injury Awareness Month, staff from the Department of Defense, and government and professional organizations participated in the National Museum of Health and Medicineopens Health.mil’s annual Brain Awareness Day to teach visitors about TBIs and ongoing research and resources related to the brain and brain health.

“NMHM has a 160-year history of documenting military medicine’s approach to understanding and treating brain trauma and disease,” said Andrea Schierkolk, the museum’s public programs manager. “Programs like Brain Awareness Day provide an opportunity to communicate the importance of making these collections available to researchers and clinicians who are investigating ways to improve the health and readiness of our service members.”

Interactive brain games and exercises were the spotlight of the 2024 Brain Awareness Day.

The Society for Neuroscience provided activities for visitors to assess their reaction time, balance, and interpretation of visual information.

Similarly, the Uniformed Services Universityopens USUHS.edu offered a craft activity where visitors could build a neuron with pipe cleaners, beads, and a foam ball. Throughout the activity, USU volunteers explained how neurons are the communicating cells in the brain.

The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke used its Lobe-oratorium® to show how the brain directs every process that enables humans to function.

“The Lobe-oratorium® is a really cool display with an interactive component where kids can learn about the different lobes of the brain and how they help them do everything in life from walking, talking, eating, sleeping, learning, [and] playing music,” said Diana Andriola, a science education and outreach specialist at NINDS.

National Intrepid Center of Excellenceopens NICoE on Health.mil

 staff showcased a variety of games and exercises to promote mindfulness and demonstrate basic activities used for therapeutic rehabilitation of a TBI.

“We provide therapeutic interventions to service members who have a traumatic brain injury,” said Jonathan Choy-Yuen, a speech-language pathologist at NICoE. “We have lots of different services ranging from health care providers to audiologists to speech pathologists and [physical therapists]. We really work with the patient to gain back function they have lost over time due to traumatic brain injury and other psychological conditions, such as [post-traumatic stress disorder].”

Heather Kopf, regional education coordinator at the Traumatic Brain Injury Center of Excellence, emphasized helmet safety, and she handed out materials describing how to identify and treat concussions and mild TBIs.

“Concussion is the most prevalent form of brain injury or TBI in the military,” she said.

Kopf emphasized that while TBIs can be sustained during combat, everyday activities also hold risks for both service members and civilians. She detailed the symptoms and signs of a mild TBI for museum visitors while walking them through a mirror tracing exercise used to help identify neuropsychological damage.

NMHM staff were also available at two stations.

Elizabeth Lockett, the Human Developmental Anatomy Center collections manager at the museum, taught visitors about neural tube development and the formation of a baby’s brain and spinal cord during gestation. Lockett used embryo models made by Osborne O. Heard for the Carnegie Institute of Washington as visual aids as she described the causes of neural tube defects.

A long-time participant at the museum’s Brain Awareness Day program, Archibald Fobbs, the neuroanatomical collections manager, showcased a collection of the museum’s brain slides that included a normal human brain and a dolphin brain. Situated in front of the museum’s exhibit on TBIs, Fobbs described TBIs, how to prevent them, and how TBIs impact the military.

NMHM's public programs provide forums for informal learning that connect the mission of the DOD museum with the public. NMHM was founded as the Army Medical Museum in 1862 and is a branch of the Defense Health Agency Research and Engineering Directorate. For more information about upcoming events, call (301) 319-3303 or visit https://www.medicalmuseum.health.milopens Medical Museum.

You also may be interested in...

Video
Jul 22, 2021

PRA Training Video 7: Symptom-Guided Management and Specialty Referral Guidance Tables

Thumbnail image of PRA training video 7, the symptom-guided management and specialty referral guidance tables.

This lesson covers how to use the Progressive Return to Activity, or PRA's Symptom-Guided Management and Specialty Referral Guidance tables. This lesson also details primary care management strategies for service members who are not progressing as expected in the PRA. Each video in the Progressive Return to Activity training series is designed to ...

Video
Jul 22, 2021

PRA Training Video 2: Six Major Changes

Thumbnail image of PRA Training Video 2, Six Major Changes

In this lesson we review the six major changes in the TBICoE's revised 2021 Progressive Return to Activity (PRA) Clinical Recommendation that differ from the original recommendation. The changes reflect the latest TBI research, and will make it easier for providers to manage the recovery process and return service members with concussion to full ...

Video
Jul 22, 2021

PRA Training Video 5: The Six Stages of the PRA

Thumbnail image for PRA training video 5, the six stages of the PRA

In this lesson, we cover the key activity objectives for each of the six stages of the Progressive Return to Activity (PRA) Clinical Recommendation and provide activity examples for each stage. Each stage is designed to gradually increase the intensity and duration of a service member's physical and cognitive activity as they advance in the PRA ...

Video
Jul 22, 2021

PRA Training Video 3: Understanding Relative Rest

Thumbnail image for PRA Training video 3, understanding relative rest

In this lesson we explain the differences between complete rest and relative rest in a staged concussion recovery process, and provide examples of activities that promote relative rest. The revised Progressive Return to Activity (PRA) Clinical Recommendation uses the term 'relative rest' to emphasize the importance of early introduction of physical ...

Video
Jul 22, 2021

PRA Training Video 1: PRA Overview

Thumbnail image of PRA training video 1, PRA overview.

In the first of TBICoE's Progressive Return to Activity (PRA) video training series, you will learn about the reasons for using a progressive return to activity process and receive an overview of the 2021 PRA algorithm and its associated tools. By the end of lesson one, providers will better understand the PRA process, and explain that process to ...

Video
Jul 22, 2021

PRA Training Video 4: PRA Progression Criteria

Thumbnail image for PRA Training video 4, PRA progression criteria

In this lesson, we review the criteria for advancing through the stages of the Progressive Return to Activity (PRA) Clinical Recommendation. Each video in the PRA training series is designed to support primary care providers' ability to manage concussion/traumatic brain injury (TBI).

Video
Feb 25, 2021

Progressive Return to Activity After Concussion Video

Progressive Return to Activity Provider Video

The PRA is an evidence-based, easy-to-use approach to help providers return service members with mild TBIs back to duty safely. TBICoE researchers have found that, if medical providers completed a two-hour, in-person training on the use of the PRA, their patients saw an overall reduction in symptoms after one week, one month, and three months, when ...

Fact Sheet
Jul 30, 2020

Concussion/Mild TBI Signs and Symptoms Spanish Version Fact Sheet

.PDF | 455.08 KB

This fact sheet — in Spanish — identifies major physical, cognitive and emotional symptoms of concussion/mild TBI, and provides coping and recovery tips.

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: April 08, 2024
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery