I have a short piece up in the January 2010 issue of Popular Science about a promising form of music therapy used in the arduous process of healing traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) in veterans. Because of the pervasiveness of IEDs, and because body armor allows soldiers to survive many explosions that might have killed them in earlier wars, TBIs have been called the "signature wound" of the Iraq War.
People, this is a big problem. Symptoms and recovery can take years — assuming that the veteran doesn't feel stigmatized about asking for help for memory problems and depression, and can get the treatment. The article takes a low estimate of "hundreds" of young veterans coming back with serious brain injuries — although the Rand Corporation has a high estimate that over 300,000 young veterans have at least mild traumatic brain injury (like any wound, TBIs are on a spectrum of severity). Let's hope the American people are willing to step up and make sure that veterans get the costly rehab they deserve.
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