Archive for the ‘assessment of catastrophic auto injuries’ Category

Bob Woodruffs Support for Undiagnosed TBI’s

Wednesday, March 7th, 2007

Bob Woodruffs Support for Undiagnosed TBI’s

Hello!

My hope is that if you are reading this you have also watched the recent story of Bob Woodruff’s miraculous recovery from a critical head injury. (TBI Traumatic Brain Injury).

His report has finally shed some light on how extensive UNDIAGNOSED head injuries are!  For our war vets but will also shed some light on undiagnosed TBI’s in auto accidents.  Maybe this reporting will finally open up the flood gates or at least crack them a little!  Maybe now people can start understanding how deep seated the real crisis is!

How doctors have no EDUCATION, TRAINING in specifically, catastrophic auto accidents.  Which has caused me to stop and realize just how wide spread the lack of education in the medical school system truly is! 

Another acknowledgement that I found blatantly missing in Mr. Woodruff’s report was that not once was there mention of the human “spirit” in the ability to “heal”.  After all with out the human “spirit” there is no life force, there is no human being, no life and certainly no brain function.
So then how can doctors begin to “properly diagnose” TBI’s when they don’t even acknowledge the spirit??

If I missed this important acknowledgement in the report please let me know!!   I would also like to thank Mr. Woodruff and his reporting team for speaking out and up on a serious issue that most people just want to go away on it’s own!

Thank you for your support and taking the time to read this!

  

Trauma Survivors Symbol??

Thursday, January 18th, 2007

Is there a Symbol for Catastrophic Trauma Survivors?

Hello All! 

I was wondering if anyone knows if there is a “Symbol” for people who have survived a catastrophic auto accident?

There are literaly millions of people a year who do survive mostly to be ignored. If there is not one I was wondering if you, anyone, has any ideas or suggestions of what would make a good “Symbol” for Trauma Survivors??

So far I came up with a small “pinky” ring made of a stretchy waterproof material, (kinda like the “Live Strong” bracelet). The colors maybe a rainbow?

It would say “C.A.I.R.” on it for a play on words first for people to “CARE” about Trauma Survivors and to promote The C.A.I.R. Foundation, Inc. The reason I thought of a pinky ring is because as most all who read this and have survived any trauma it is always the little things that make the biggest difference in our healing and recovery and most of all Hope!

The rainbow would symbolize all the different types of people young, old, etc that survive trauma each and every day. (Overall I feel this would be an inexpensive symbol to make) Ok any feedback on this idea would be very helpful and of course I would love to know of your ideas that you feel would be good???

Please respond to antinea@cairfoundationinc.com

ALL responses will be answered and considered.

THANK YOU!

What YOU should know about Catastrophic Auto Accidents!

Sunday, December 31st, 2006

Catastrophic Auto Injury Research Foundation, What you should know;   

C.A.I.R. Foundation, Inc. A Non-Profit (pending 501c(3)An organization creating awareness, education, research and support for the increased understanding and training regarding the “human physics” of a catastrophic auto injury. Presently no organization endeavors to do this. 

First off I would like to commend the innovative and courageous soul who had the fortitude to put such a presence on the internet! I was very surprised and grateful to find this site!

What many of you already may have realized if you are an accident/injury challenged individual is that there is no research that is presently taking place regarding the physics of “how to properly assess, diagnose, and treat” catastrophic auto injuries. If you are not aware of it the only research facilities that do exist now that are making great progress is mainly in improving CAR safety, which has ONLY existed since 1998!

There are approximately 6 CIREN centers around the country all sponsored by the car companies. (CIREN is Crash Injury Research and Engineering Network). They assess and research crash data from ONLY these 6 centers in order to, mainly, improve the safety of the vehicles. This is crucial and necessary but does not address the physics that cause the people, who are catastrophically injured, to be assessed and taken care of thoroughly.

As a result of my own experiences I have created a first draft of what I think should start to be addressed and the first order would be to create a website. All suggestions are welcomed.

You can view the draft here:

http://www.traumasupport.org/docs/CAIR_Foundation_Inc.zip

IF you have ANY questions, comments, ideas, and feedback of any kind I would very much like to learn what you think and/or if you have an interest in getting involved in helping in ANY way. Please also read the article “Information to Support C.A.I.R. Foundation, Inc” for a fascinating look at how technology could help make a difference.

Thank you for your interest in reading this article and draft!

Kind regards,

Antinea

Please respond to support@cairfoundationinc.com

Assessment of soft tissue, (muscles) in a auto accident

Wednesday, July 26th, 2006

RECENTLY the powers that be are finally making an effort to create a real system of gathering accident data at the scene of an accident. An on-going project still to be realized. (See Automotive Black Boxes).

 In my 10+ years experience of going through the systems and trauma physicians and trauma professionals what has become glaringly obvious is that these poor professionals just have no education in the physics that are created when a catastrophic auto accident happens!

Do you think that these trauma professionals know how the energy from a catatstrophic impact can be absorbed and stored in the human body, creating invisible injuries? Even if they did, how can they assess the injured person in front of them?

Modern medicine refers to anything that is not bone as “soft tissue” when the muscle systems they are refering to is many, many times stronger than bone.  What do they think really protects our bones?

As you read, the “Automotive Black Box” article please understand that even when/if they get ALL the correct data to the ER Trauma Team and even with the CIREN centers, the doctors and medical staff, respectfully are NOT EDCUATED or TRAINED in understanding the injury physics of an auto accident.  Many of these injuries that also cannot be seen in any radiological tests and may not show up for months or years causing further mental and / or physical disabilities. 

Please understand I do respect those doctors and medical staffs in they’re treating life-threatening injuries they are lifesavers and need to be commended.  What I am concerned about is that old saying, “we cannot change what we are not aware of”. 

A major goal of the C.A.I.R. Foundation is to make the public aware so that we can start demanding that there not only be changes in the automotive industry; and how important it is to communicate more information to the ER Trauma teams but also the types of information communicated and
that a change MUST take place in the medical community in order to change the way the “soft tissue” is viewed and how muscles react before, during and after a catastrophic accident. 

The medical community must be educated and trained to understand the roles that the muscle systems, (soft tissue) truly has when they assess a catastrophic auto injury. 

Please respond if you have any interest in helping get the word out or have an opinion!

Thank you for your interest!

Proper assessment of catastrophic auto injuries.

Tuesday, July 25th, 2006

C.A.I.R. Foundation, Inc. A Non-Profit (pending 501c(3)An organization creating awareness, education, research and support for the increased understanding and training regarding the “human physics” of a catastrophic auto injury.

What many of you already may have realized if you are an accident/injury challenged individual is that there is no research that is presently taking place regarding the physics of

“how to properly assess, diagnose, and treat” catastrophic auto injuries.

 

If you are not aware of it the only research facilities that do exist now that are making great progress is mainly in improving CAR safety, which has ONLY existed since 1998!
Which is extemely important but does not solve the problem of which why C.A.I.R. was created.

There are approximately 6 CIREN centers around the country all sponsored by the car companies. (CIREN is Crash Injury Research and Engineering Network). They assess and research crash data from ONLY these 6 centers in order to, mainly, improve the safety of the vehicles. This is crucial and necessary but does not address the physics that cause the people, who are catastrophically injured, to be assessed and taken care of thoroughly.

As a result of my own experiences I have created the C.A.I.R foundation in hopes of not just raising awareness and creating education in this area but also in changing the way people are “processed” after a catastrophic accident.

Please read the article on the “Autmotive Black Boxes” and you will see first hand what is taking place today in order to increase the communication to the hospital and ER teams.
This is only the beginning. 

 All suggestions and volunteers are welcomed.

Engineers join push for automotive black boxes. Analyze Auto Injuries

Tuesday, July 11th, 2006
Charles J. Murray      
EE Times Electronic Engineers
(04/19/2002 2:47 PM EDT)

Investigators in protective gear pick through a pile of smoking, twisted metal for clues to the crash. One reaches down, pries back some steel and pulls the black box from the wreckage.

Another plane down? No. This time, it’s a multicar pileup on the interstate.

It’s a postcrash scenario that auto makers, insurance companies and authorities hope will emerge from a groundswell movement to put “black boxes” into automobiles. The effort gained momentum this past week, as standards work shifted into high gear and three companies accelerated their alliance to deliver crash information electronically to a managed database.

The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers said it has begun work on a universal standard for vehicle-based data recorders that would capture crash information for analysis. The IEEE standard, due out in 2003, is expected to help manufacturers develop such devices for autos, trucks, buses, ambulances, fire trucks and other vehicles.

At the same time, a three-company alliance that includes IBM Corp. announced the formation of an entity, Global Safety Data LLC, that will manage a global database of crash information. The partners — IBM, Insurance Services Office Inc. (Jersey City, N.J.) and Safety Intelligence Systems Corp. (Lindenhurst, N.Y.) will pursue a system for electronically collecting, transmitting and depositing crash information over the Internet to a database known as the Global Safety Data Vault. The hope is that, by enabling vehicles to transmit crash data instantly and by creating a central repository for the collection of that data, the system can improve experts’ understanding of auto crashes and reduce accident-related fatalities.

“We’re trying to build an end-to-end network to capture crash information and create knowledge with it,” said Dr. Ricardo Martinez, president and chief executive officer of Safety Intelligence Systems, who is also an emergency room physician and a former head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). “We see a tremendous number of unresolved crash issues that could be resolved by getting better information.”

Proponents of the black-box concept believe the standards effort and the new alliance are a necessary means of dealing with the enormous public-health problem posed by automobile accidents. According to National Safety Council statistics, a death is caused by a motor vehicle accident every 12 minutes; a disabling injury occurs every 14 seconds. There are already more than 6,000 crashes per day in the United States, the statistics say, and the number of registered vehicles in this country is expected to double over the next 20 years from today’s 217 million.

Proponents of the black-box technology want to change the way accident data is collected. Today’s methods, they say, are primitive and typically rely on hand measurements of skid marks and crumple zones. “Most of the crash data today is essentially junk,” Martinez said. “And it’s what we use to form our policies and vehicle designs.”

Martinez has petitioned NHTSA to mandate the inclusion of a black box, or at least a dedicated data chip, on every vehicle sold in the United States. That way, he said, the information gleaned by wheel speed sensors, airbag sensors, crankshaft sensors, yaw sensors and seat belt sensors could be collected and stored on board vehicles. It could then be analyzed by experts to determine a vehicle’s “delta V,” or change in velocity, in the moments before impact. And it could tell researchers whether airbags fired properly, whether seat belts were buckled and whether brakes failed.

Flintstones to Jetsons

“As an emergency room physician, it’s hard for me to understand how we can put all this electronic technology into the car, but when the crash is over, we go back to this primitive method of investigation,” Martinez said. “Now that we have the ability to capture a lot of knowledge, we should move ourselves from the Flintstonian era to the Jetsonian era.”

Eleven of the 45 companies that build passenger cars worldwide already use some kind of black-box technology, according to representatives of the IEEE. The best-known of those is General Motors Corp., which said three years ago that it includes the device, known as a sensing and diagnostics module, as part of its airbag sensing systems on most GM vehicles. The module can store such information as engine speed, vehicle speed, airbag deployment, seat belt deployment and the state of the brakes before and during an accident.

Similarly, Delphi Corp. (formerly Delphi Automotive Systems; Troy, Mich.) has been providing black boxes for racing applications for about six years. The boxes, which measure about 4 x 4 x 2 inches, use a special “crash-hardened” design to enable them to survive accidents. The box incorporates 2 Mbytes of logging RAM to store data that is written 1,000 times per second. It is bolted beneath the dashboard in racing vehicles.

This year, Delphi has also announced that it will place accelerometers (force sensors) in the ears of three Indy-circuit race drivers. The sensors will be wired directly to the black boxes, which will collect data on forces applied to drivers’ heads.

But there is still no standard way to collect automotive black-box data. Neither is there a single repository to store it.

NHTSA’s Fatal Analysis Record System is currently said to be the world’s best collection, but it holds data from only about 50,000 accidents of the roughly 6 million that occur in the United States every year, experts say.

Input requested

That’s why backers of the technology want to see the application of standards, such as the IEEE’s nascent “Motor Vehicle Event Data Recorders” (IEEE P1616). IEEE said it has been working on the standard since November and has already been in touch with 104 automotive companies and vendors for input. The standard will define what should be captured, including such data as the date, time, location, velocity, heading, number of occupants and seat belt usage. IEEE is encouraging engineers with expertise in automotive electronics, embedded systems, telematics, GPS, solid-state recorders and automotive software to help with the standard

“The IEEE effort falls right in line with the idea of getting better, more accurate data, more quickly,” said Jim Ruthven, program director of IBM Automotive Solutions (Southfield, Mich.).

IBM and its allies, meanwhile, want to take the concept a step further. The computing giant is working to provide the software architecture to enable black boxes to gather crash data and electronically transfer it to a computing infrastructure for analysis.

Automated data collection

IBM engineers say the data from a black box could be collected in one of two ways. The first would be via data extraction technologies — from companies like Vetronix Corp. (Santa Barbara, Calif.) — that let users draw the data off black-box recorders and transfer it elsewhere for further study.

In the long run, however, they hope to use automated techniques to transmit data from the black boxes to the Internet via an automotive telematics system. “The real power of this plan will emerge when you’re able to combine it with telematics,” Ruthven said. “Nothing is so compelling as the ability to pull the crash data off and upload it to a remote system.”

IBM also hopes the alliance will tap its Intelligent Data Miner software tool suite for analyzing the crash data in the Global Safety Data Vault. IBM has demonstrated the technology on a Chrysler Concorde concept vehicle equipped with a black box and the software architecture. Such efforts show that the technology is easily within engineers’ grasp, but it must clear the inevitable social hurdles. Several consumer groups have expressed qualms about potential privacy violations, particularly if the technology is associated with global positioning systems that could track a driver’s whereabouts.

But the alliance says the system would contain only vehicle information. “Police reports have a lot more personal information in them,” said Martinez.

See ya soon!
We know you CAIR!

See ya soon!We know you CAIR!