The Brain Injury Alliance of Oklahoma does not support, endorse or recommend any method, treatment, or program for brain-injured persons. No endorsement is intended or implied.
Tel (918) 789-0406
E-mail: jhearod@bnnrehab.com
If you need immediate medical assistance, please call 911 or proceed to your nearest emergency room. If you are experiencing a mental health emergency, please call or text 988.
Brain Injury Safety and Prevention
The Brain Injury Association of Oklahoma does not support, endorse or recommend any method, treatment, or program for brain-injured persons. We only try to inform you, believing you have the right to know what is available. No endorsement is intended or implied.
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Get information, build skills, and join discussion groups. Link to resources, rehab, and research sites, as well as lay and professional journals.
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Inside this site, you will find answers to your most common questions, legal assistance, and counsel, current Information on neurotrauma issues, and resources to get results.
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Brain Injury Information Page from the Brain Injury Law Office
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Bicycle Helmet Safety Institute
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National Organization on Disability (NOD) and Voter's Rights
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Traumatic Brain Injury Survival Guide
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Traumatic brain injury resource. Brain injury facts, information, symptoms, and support. Resources for preventing, treating, and living with brain injury. This is a terrific site and a valuable resource for survivors, their families, and professionals!
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The Brain Injury Guide & Resources
Articles and videos about brain injury. This Brain Injury Guide and Resources website is the result of collaboration between the University of Missouri, School of Health Professions, Department of Health Psychology, and the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (MO-DHSS). The Missouri Traumatic Brain Injury Implementation Partnership Project, awarded to MO-DHSS by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, provided financial resources for this website.
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Oklahoma Tornado: Football Team Survivors Wore Helmets. So Should You.
Head injuries are responsible for the majority of tornado deaths. So why don’t more people have helmets handy? A campaign to make them a key component of every storm-readiness kit.