5-year-old Garrett Morris was riding a bike, made a sharp turn and crashed.
“You also have a big bump on your head, is that from the accident too?” ask Kathleen Nelson, M.D., a Professor of Pediatrics.
The question is: did he injure his brain?
“Can you make muscles, keep them up there?” asks Dr. Nelson as she takes him through a battery of tests, ”Close your eyes, I want you to touch your nose with this finger… touch your nose, touch my finger, touch your nose…stick out your tongue, now wiggle it around… I want you to walk to the door like you’re walking a tight rope…
Everything, says Dr. Nelson seems o-k. “His neurological examination was normal. He was a pretty lucky boy that he did not hurt himself worse than the cut on the chin and the bump on the head.“
But the key question Dr. Nelson wants to ask…“Were you wearing a helmet?
His answer: No. He cut his chin, and bumped his head, but without his helmet it could have been worse.
“It should be ingrained in children, and it really should be promoted for children that they don’t get on a bicycle without a helmet. Just like they don’t get in a car without fastening their seatbelts, they don’t get on a bike without putting on their helmet,” says Dr. Nelson.
He seems to be fine, but his parents will have to watch him closely.
“Whenever a child has a bump on their head,” says Dr. Nelson, “It’s important to watch them particularly for the next six to twelve hours. And we watch to make sure they use both sides of the body evenly and equally, watch for any vomiting or any dizziness, any sort of change in his personality.”
When a kid like Garrett goes dashing out the door to ride his
bike…you may have to remind him: hey… don’t forget your helmet!
“He’s only five years old. He does not have the judgment for himself that necessarily would tell him, put on the helmet, but his is really the age where those kinds of habits become formed,” says Dr. Nelson, “And so it’s important for parents to enforce that and to really promote it with their children.” |