The University of Missouri School of Law presents the 2015 Veterans Clinic Symposium – Traumatic Brain Injury: Lessons Learned from Our Nation’s Athletes and Military.
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The History of TBI Claims in VA Disability Compensation Cases
Amy Odom
National Litigation Director
National Veterans Legal Services Program
Living with TBI: Changed Lives
Alex Pracht
with a few words from his mother, Pat Pracht
Retired U.S. Army, OEF (2008-2009)
Client, University of Missouri School of Law
Veterans Clinic
Shawn Lee, ’15
Veteran, 101st Airborne
Attorney, Fox Stretz & Quinn
Moderator Eric Hart
Associate Clinical Professor
Department of Health Psychology
University of Missouri
Living through the League of Denial: an Athlete, an Attorney & an Astute Professor
Paul Anderson
Attorney, The Klamann Law Firm
Creator, NFLConcussionLitigation.com
Marvin Washington
Retired NFL Player
Member of the 1998 Denver Broncos Super
Bowl Team
Douglas E. Abrams
Associate Professor of Law
University of Missouri School of Law
Moderator: Justin Trueblood
Third-Year Student at the University of Missouri
School of Law and President of the Mizzou Law
Sports Society
Contemporary Game Day Prevention: Perspectives from the Trainer and the Player
Rex Sharp
Associate Athletic Director for Sports Medicine
University of Missouri Department of Athletics
Michael Sam
Football Analyst, KOMU-TV
Defensive Lineman, University of Missouri
Football, 2009-2013
7th Round Selection, 2014 NFL Draft
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Overview:
On May 19, 2005, the New England Journal of Medicine published Dr. Susan Okie’s article, “ Traumatic Brain Injury in the War Zone,” which reported on the case of Sgt. David Emme, who was severely brain-injured by an improvised explosive device (IED) as part of a convoy transporting Iraqi volunteers for military training. Sgt. Emme was one of 450 service members treated at Walter Reed from 2003 to 2005 for traumatic brain injury (TBI). More than 30,000 service members suffer from TBI, with an estimated economic cost of $76.5 billion.
Kansas City Chiefs player Javon Belcher shot and killed his girlfriend before killing himself on December 1, 2012. CNN reported that pathology reports found Belcher suffered from brain disease known as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). CTE was found in the brains of 87 of 91 deceased NFL players who donated their bodies for research, according to a study released on September 18, 2015. As explained by Dr. Ann McKee, one of the doctors involved in the study, this is not a matter of sensationalizing an issue to create controversy for football fans or the NFL, “this is a very real disease.”
Evidence of CTE has been found in the brains of veterans, just as it has been found in NFL players.
The Veterans Clinic at the University of Missouri School of Law is pleased to present its second annual symposium focusing on the legal and practical issues arising from traumatic brain injury, a very real concern for athletes and our military.
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