Hundreds of patients who have suffered knocks to the head are inundating Victorian emergency departments, prompting one major hospital to open the state’s first public concussion clinic.
Around 90 per cent of patients recover within seven days, with the clinic aiming to help the remaining 10 per cent who are left with ongoing symptoms such as headaches, dizziness, sleeping difficulties, brain fog and a loss of speech or sense of smell. But over the next few days, Kemp’s condition deteriorated and he was in and out of the emergency department with strobe-like vision and vomiting.
An optometrist has given him exercises to improve his once-perfect eyesight, which is now impacted by long-sightedness due to the head injury. He said while most people recovered from a one-off concussion, repeated concussions increased a person’s risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease, and to a lesser degree, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE.
Alfred Health is not the only major health service grappling with a large number of concussion presentations.
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