PEI

UPEI supporting students and staff with weekly concussion clinic

A new concussion clinic will be offered one day a week to students and staff at UPEI, with hopes of expanding the program to the public in the new year.

'To be able to have this on campus is just another great support'

The free concussion clinic is open to all UPEI students, faculty and staff. (Jessica Doria-Brown/CBC)

A new clinic is now open at UPEI Heath and Wellness Centre in Charlottetown to better support students who have had a concussion.

The clinic will assist students with rehabilitation after a concussion, ensure patients are recovering properly and reduce the risk of further harm.

"We want to make sure that people who have had concussions return to their normal activities as seamlessly as possible," said said Gail Macartney, assistant professor in UPEI's Faculty of Nursing and member of the UPEI Concussion Awareness Program Research Team.

"We really want to reduce the risk of second impact syndrome or getting people back to high-risk activities too soon."

Woman uses a medical instrument to check the eyesight of a patient.
Gail Macartney, who is also a nurse practitioner, demonstrates a concussion checkup in the UPEI Health and Wellness Centre. (Jessica Doria-Brown/CBC)

Macartney said that they also want to ensure that people don't remain sedentary after injury, but take a measured approach to their rehabilitation.

"We see this kind of downward spiral sometimes, of concussion, where kids are not getting back to their activities or individuals are not getting back to work in a timely fashion and then they start spending to much time at home and they get depressed,"

Free clinic and checkups

The free clinic will be offered once a week for students and staff. Officials hope the new clinic will help prevent longer term physical and emotional damage in patients.

Students, faculty and staff with a head injury can come in for an assessment and advice on safely returning to their normal routine.

They are invited for a follow-up appointment six to eight weeks later.

Woman in a medical office.
Gail Macartney hopes that the concussion care clinic at UPEI will help the university and community at large. (Jessica Doria-Brown/CBC)

Macartney said that feedback has already been positive.

"The student that I saw, I saw a bit of relief in his eyes because I gave him the green light to exercise," Macartney said.

"He was thinking he needed to rest. You tell a 22-year-old to go home and rest, they really don't like that too much."

UPEI already has a concussion research program on campus and officials said the clinic will take that work one step further.

Chris Huggan, UPEI's director of athletics and recreation, says the university's care for the student athletes health is their utmost concern. (Jessica Doria-Brown/CBC)

"We're constantly looking at how we can prevent, better detect and then better treat any of our students and student athletes who have had a concussion or signs of concussion symptoms," said Chris Huggan, UPEI's director of athletics and recreation. 

"So to be able to have this on campus is just another great support."

UPEI plans to expand the program in the new year to allow referrals from community care providers, physicians and nurse practitioners.

The university hopes the new clinic will also assist with UPEI's own concussion research into best practices for concussion treatment.

More P.E.I. news

With files from Jessica Doria-Brown