Saturday, November 16

NGO advocates increased awareness on brain injuries, neurological conditions

The Brain and Spine Foundation Africa, a non-governmental organisation, has called for increased awareness on brain injuries, neurological conditions and its traumatic effects on victims.

The foundation gave the call at an Art Gala event, organised for survivors, caregivers as well as stakeholders, in Abuja.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that neurological conditions include brain aneurysm, brain tumor or cancer, traumatic brain injury, stroke, spinal cord injury and tumor, dementia among others.

Mrs Chika Okwuolisa, Founder of the foundatio, said it was important to raise awareness around the condition as most people spiritualize and attribute it to the “works of the enemy”.

According to her, most patients and families continue to struggle with it, as there are little or no idea of the conditions especially in rural communities.

“These are conditions that so many people do not talk about or even have slightest idea of what it means, until one encounters a first hand experience.

“A brain aneurysm for example is a weakness in a blood vessel in the brain that balloons and fills with blood and it ruptures every 18 minutes.

“The ruptured brain aneurysm are fatal in about 50 per cent of cases, while 66 per cent of those who survive, suffer some permanent neurological deficit.

“Approximately 15 per cent of people with raptured aneurysm die before reaching the hospital because most of the deaths are due to rapid and massive brain injury from the initial bleeding,” she said.

The founder added that there had been unnecessary deaths and suffering of the hospitals, especially the primary health care centers as most of them do not have first aid intervention for neurological emergencies.

“Collectively, we have lost our mothers, fathers, spouses, cousins, children, sister, brother, best friends to some of these conditions.

“But the truth remains that most of us are not even aware that we lost them to these conditions due to lack of awareness,” she added.

Okwuolisa added that the foundation decided to use art to tell the stories of the victims and to help assist them in their rehabilitation process.

“Neurology and art may not seem like a natural connection, but to us in this community, it is.

“Art touches the core aspect of everything we do, though neurological condition is complex and often times complicated.

“Art helps the survivors and the grieving families lean on different forms of artistic expression to find their pathway during rehabilitation and recovery and it helps us remain connected to both ourselves and the world,” she added.

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