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research

B-JUST: Brain Injury & Juvenile Services Training

CBIRT faculty, including Ann Glang and Laurie Powell, are working with Deanne Unruh from the University of Oregon College of Education on a 3-year project from the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research to identify training needs for juvenile corrections personnel related to brain injury. Community reentry outcomes for formerly incarcerated youth are...

Childhood Brain Injury: Moving Research into Practice | Two-Day

Conference Topics and Speakers Download brochure Thank you for registering for CBIRT's 2020 Conference, Childhood Brain Injury: Moving Research into Practice! Below is the agenda with links to PowerPoint presentations. If you registered for ASHA or CME credits , please follow this link and complete the form to ensure that you receive your full credits. If you...

Childhood Brain Injury: Moving Research into Practice | Day 2

Day 2: November 14, 2020 Click to join the Conference or visit https://uoregon.zoom.us/j/97664682847?pwd=a0dUSGFhL2tZbzNRRFQ2MmtWb083UT09 in your browser. Conference Topics and Speakers Download brochure Thank you for registering for CBIRT's 2020 Conference, Childhood Brain Injury: Moving Research into Practice! Below is the agenda with links to PowerPoint presentations. If you...

Childhood Brain Injury: Moving Research into Practice | Day 1

Day 1: November 13, 2020 Click to join the Conference or visit https://uoregon.zoom.us/j/98357118536?pwd=MzN2UFZEUmtXa0hLYkQrREdsVVEyZz09 in your browser. Conference Topics and Speakers Download brochure Thank you for registering for CBIRT's 2020 Conference, Childhood Brain Injury: Moving Research into Practice! Below is the agenda with links to PowerPoint presentations. If you...

Return to School (RTS)

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention awarded the Center on Brain Injury Research and Training (CBIRT) a 4-year, $2.2 million cooperative agreement to study an established Return to School (RTS) program for students with traumatic brain injury (TBI). The project is led by Ann Glang from CBIRT and Deanne Unruh from the College of Education. “This research is unique in that it allows us to...

TOTS | Enhancing Parenting Skills: Application of a Web-based Three-Tiered Model

During this 5-year project, the University of Oregon and the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital and Medical Center, in partnership with University Centers for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities (UCEDDs) in Oregon and Ohio and other key stakeholders will develop and evaluate an intervention to reduce challenging behavior in young children with intellectual and developmental disabilities. The...

Transitions Web: Web-based Transition Training for Students with Traumatic Brain Injury

Adolescents ages 15-19 have a higher rate of traumatic brain injury (TBI) than any other age group. Recent research indicates that transition outcomes (post-secondary education completion, employment, independent living/community integration) are poor for this population and that students who receive special education services in high school do no better in these domains than those who do not. Despite the clear need to improve these outcomes, students with TBI rarely receive appropriate transition services, often because educators and transition personnel lack the knowledge and skills needed to tailor effective transition practices to this unique population.

GPS-TBI: Generalizing Problem Solving Strategies to Everyday Environments Following TBI

Cognitive impairments, strongly linked to reduced independence and community integration, are one of the most debilitating consequences of traumatic brain injury (TBI). Systematically trained cognitive strategies—particularly problem-solving strategies—offer a consistent means of responding to the myriad, often unpredictable breakdowns resulting from these impairments. However, due to limited funding for rehabilitation services, persons with TBI rarely receive the training needed to learn and generalize such strategies to their everyday lives.