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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (May 27, 2011)
S T R E E T R O O T S P H O T O l U L L Ä T R A T IO N Traumatic brain injuries often go undiagnosed, especially on the streets & B Y K A T E t< S X C O N T R IB U T IN G W R IT E R ■w T ou might say Nick Patton was born to fish. Y 1 Literally born on a boat, Nick spent his . earliest years living in orphanages along the Alaskan coastline. He ran away at the age. of eight and quickly learned how to take careof himself and to rely on others - traveling in groups around the Pacific Northwest, picking apples and doing day labor. He was only 11 years old when he started working the boats and canneries of the Alaskan fishing industry. With a community of other fisherman, Nick followed the seasonal work, living on boats and in tents, even during the cold Anchorage winters. . It all ended with the smack of a crowbar. Nick was 32 and alone on the night he was attacked, and there were no witnesses. With no memory of the assault, he has few clues to the story except for the scar on his forehead where the crowbar cracked his skull. “First it hurt the front of my brain, because that’s where they hit me. Then, the force caused my brain to hit the back of my skull, back here. Then, there was also some swelling, so that caused more damage - way down here in my brain stem. Nick woke up in an Anchorage hospital, but nothing was ever the same. His gregarious nature was now drowned out by voices and hallucinations, and reality was lost in the din. “I couldn’t deal with society anymore. I didn’t know what was real or who to trust. I ended up cutting all ties to the world.” Alcohol and drugs became his only way of coping. “If I stayed high I could deal with it.” For the first time in his life, Nick found himself unable t o w o r k a n d s p e n t t h e n e x t s e v e r a l y e a r s s e ll in g h e ro in , p an h an d lin g , an d living o n th e s tr e e ts . Unfortunately, Nick’s story isn’t unique. News about traumatic brain injury, or TBI, has increasingly come to light in recent months, from a spate of sports-related injuries particularly among football players, to the blast injuries of veterans r e tu r n in g fro m Afghanistan and Iraq. Although, homelessness can be the ultimate tragic consequence of a brain injury, the medical world is only beginning to connect the dots between TBI and homelessness. According to the National Healthcare for the Homeless Council, at least half of all homeless individuals have experienced at least one head injury in their lifetime. “Brain injury in the homeless community is a very common thing that we’re just starting to learn about,” says Dr. Barb Wismer, a practicing physician who serves on the board of the Council. Few formal studies have been done, but those few are sobering. In one recent study of 904 homeless men and women in Toronto, Ontario, 53 percent reported some type of traumatic brain injury. Studies in Milwaukie, Wisconsin and Boston, Massachusetts offer similar statistics of 48 and 67 percent The Toronto study found that for those who had experienced a head injury, 70 percent had suffered the injury prior to becoming homeless. And although there is no clear cause and effect the results suggest that TBI could be at least one contributor to some individuals’ homelessness. That shouldn’t be so surprising, as the long-term effects o f a brain injury can be debilitating, Symptoms vary widely. Some are as dramatic as Nick’s hallucinations. Others are much more Inside Witness fo r Loretta Sm ith Ken Hawkins on the life as a conflict zone journalist A conversation with the county commissioner on the heals of her African- American forum Page 8 Page 3 th e revolution s u b t le . S o m e t i m e s d e s c r i b e d a s a n “in v is ib l e disab ility ,” b ra in in ju ry o fte n c a u s e s p ro b le m s w ith m em o ry , c o n c e n tra tio n an d th in k in g , as w ell a s th e ability to regulate emotion and behavior. As a result, brain injury survivors often have a hard time doing the work they did before their injuries. Family and social relationships suffer, s tr ain in g the most immediate safety net before homelessness. "Brain Injury In the homeless community is a very common thing that we're just starting to learn about." — DR. BARB W IS M E R N A T IO N A L H E A L T H C A R E FO R T H E H O M E L E S S C O U N C IL The same symptoms can also create barriers for those individuals once they are on the streets. . Navigating shelter systems, attending to basic health and hygiene, and accessing services can be overwhelming and difficult. Controlling anger can be a daily struggle. And once on the streets, the risk qf brain injury continues. Steve Hill suffered head injuries throughout his adolescence and adulthood, from sports injuries to snow boarding to fight clubs. He describes each one As taking him down another notch. Even small injuries caused intense reactions including vomiting and confusion. “You’re See HEADS page 10 Vendor profile Jason Bo is the new face in The Pearl Page 6