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84 UMKC L. Rev. 411 (2015-2016)
Traumatic Brain Injury in Criminal Litigation

handle is hein.journals/umkc84 and id is 415 raw text is: 



        TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN CRIMINAL
                              LITIGATION

              Stacey Wood,  PhD  and Bhushan  S. Agharkar, M.D.*

        Traumatic   brain  injury  (TBI)  is  a  highly  prevalent   cause  of
neurocognitive  disorders resulting in  approximately  2.5  million emergency
department  visits per year.' As a result, the prevalence rate of traumatic brain
injury is remarkably high among  criminal defendants as derived from studies of
individuals in prisons  and  jails.  The  Center for  Disease  Control  (CDC)
estimated that twenty-five to eighty-seven percent of individuals in jail and prison
report having  experienced a TBI.  In this review we  discuss common   referral
questions involving individuals with a history of TBI in criminal litigation. We
cover competency   to proceed, mental state defenses, and mitigation in capital
and non-capital cases.

                               I. OVERVIEW

        Traumatic   brain  injury  (TBI)  is  a  highly   prevalent  cause  of
neurocognitive  disorders resulting in  approximately  2.5 million  emergency
department  visits per year.2 Every day approximately 138 people die as a result
of TBI  related causes in the U.S.' However, most individuals survive traumatic
brain  injury, which  can  result in temporary  or permanent   impairments  in
emotional and cognitive functioning.4 The purpose of this article is to discuss the
implications of  brain-injury for criminal litigation. We  will begin with  an
overview  of the prevalence and general impact of traumatic brain injury and then
discuss traumatic  brain injury in relationship to specific legal questions that
commonly   arise in criminal litigation.

                 II. PREVALENCE AND IMPLICATIONS

In general, according to the Center for Disease Control, total combined rates for
traumatic  brain  injury  (TBI)-related  emergency   department   (ED)   visits,
hospitalizations, and deaths have increased over the past decade despite progress



* Professor Stacey Wood is a clinical neuropsychologist and Professor of Psychology at Scripps
College, in Claremont, California. Bhushan S. Agharkar, M.D., is in private practice in Atlanta,
GA, on the clinical faculty at Emory and Morehouse Schools of Medicine, and is a Fellow of the
American Psychiatric Association. His email is agharkarmd@gmail.com and telephone is
404.939.6636.
'Basic Information about Traumatic Brain Injury and Concussion, CTRS. FOR DISEASE CONTROL
AND  PREVENTION, http://www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury/basics.html (last visited Sept. 17,
2015).
2 Id.
  Traumatic Brain Injury in the United States: Fact Sheet, CTRS. FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND
PREVENTION, http://www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury/get-the facts.html (last visited Sept. 17,
2015).
4 Id.

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