Traumatic brain injury (TBI), defined as damage to the brain from external mechanical force such as a blow, jolt, or penetrating injury, affects an average of 110 New Zealanders every day. Recent research from Auckland University of Technology's Brain Health Research Institute and collaborators has revealed that at least 40,000 people experience TBI annually, challenging long-held assumptions about its nature and scope. This work, including a population-based study in the Waikato region comparing 2021–2022 data to 2010–2011, underscores the need for better awareness and prevention strategies, particularly as New Zealand's ageing population grows—with one million people aged 65+ projected by 2029.
New Zealand's no-fault Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) covers TBI claims, providing insights into national trends. Between 2017 and 2023, claims rose 48.6%, from 745 to 1,028 per 100,000 population, costing hundreds of millions annually. Universities like Auckland University of Technology (AUT), the University of Auckland, and the University of Otago lead efforts to understand TBI beyond high-profile causes like rugby concussions or road accidents.
What Defines Traumatic Brain Injury?
TBI severity ranges from mild (concussion, brief consciousness loss or amnesia), moderate (longer impairment, abnormal scans), to severe (extended unconsciousness, significant deficits). Diagnosis involves Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores, imaging like CT/MRI, and biomarkers. In NZ, 93–95% are mild, yet they account for most claims due to volume. Mild TBI often goes underreported, as symptoms like headaches, dizziness, and cognitive fog mimic other issues, delaying recovery.
ACC data shows falls as the top cause (39.5%), followed by sports (31.6%), motor vehicle accidents (20%), and assaults (8.9%). This diversity drives university-led initiatives, such as AUT's screening tools and Auckland's Sports Human Brain Bank, studying repeated head impacts in athletes.
🧠 Myth 1: Most Traumatic Brain Injuries Are Severe
The misconception that TBI equates to coma or life-altering damage persists, but evidence shows otherwise. In the Waikato study, 93% were mild TBI, yielding an incidence of 852 per 100,000—stable from prior decades but highlighting volume's impact. Moderate-severe cases (7%) burden healthcare most, yet mild cases accumulate, leading to 35,000–40,000 annual incidents nationwide.
- Mild TBI: GCS 13–15, symptoms resolve in days/weeks but 10–20% persist months.
- Moderate: GCS 9–12, hospital stay weeks.
- Severe: GCS ≤8, long-term rehab.
AUT's Brain Health Research Institute (BHRI, formerly TBI Network) researches mild TBI predictors, using genes, cognition, and support to forecast outcomes.
🏠 Myth 2: TBI Is Primarily a Sports or Car Crash Issue
While rugby and roads grab headlines, falls dominate: 48% of cases, often at home (43% location). Elderly tripping or children falling from heights/beds contribute significantly. Sports (31.6%) and MVAs (20%) follow, but assaults (16%) rise, especially urban males 15–34.
University of Otago studies cervical spine roles in mild-moderate TBI, linking whiplash-like forces in non-impact falls. Prevention targets homes via Safekids Aotearoa, backed by Waikato Institute of Technology research.
| Cause | % Cases |
|---|---|
| Falls | 48% |
| Sports | 31.6% |
| MVAs | 20% |
| Assaults | 16% |
👴 Myth 3: Only Young People Suffer TBI
Children 0–4 and youth 15–34 feature in media, but ≥65-year-olds bear the largest burden (39% falls). Incidence rose for 35–64 (27%) and ≥65 (137%) since 2010–11, driven by demographics. Paediatric TBI dropped, possibly COVID restrictions.
University of Auckland's Centre for Brain Research examines age-related vulnerabilities, while Otago pilots blood biomarkers for rapid paediatric screening.
Photo by Natasha Connell on Unsplash
⚖️ Myth 4: TBI Risk Is Equal Across Populations
Males (1.31x females), Māori (higher than Europeans/Asians), and urban dwellers (1.57x rural) face elevated risks. Socioeconomic factors—poorer housing, income—exacerbate Māori rates; colonisation legacies compound.
COVID-19 shifted patterns: female assaults up (15–64), child/rural down. AUT's Wayfind TBI project addresses inequities in mild TBI recovery, incorporating Māori perspectives.
🛡️ Myth 5: TBIs Are Unavoidable
Prevention works: ACC's 'Have a hmmm' campaign, Community Strength/Balance classes, Taurite Tū (Māori-led). Tech like helmet sensors (AUT trials) and home mods reduce falls 20–30%.
For details, see this Conversation article or ACC prevention page.
NZ Universities Driving TBI Research
AUT's BHRI leads with projects on concussion knowledge (coaches/parents), recovery predictors, and long-term impacts. Their Waikato study informs policy.
University of Auckland's CBR houses the Sports Human Brain Bank, analysing rugby brains for CTE links. VR rehab simulates tasks for recovery.
Otago researches cervical dysfunction in mild TBI and fatigue interventions. Wayfind TBI (multi-uni) optimises concussion care.
Explore TBI careers at research jobs or career advice.
Societal Impacts and Challenges
TBI costs NZ $1.45B+ yearly (2019 figures), rising with claims. Long-term: unemployment, mental health, family strain. Māori overrepresentation demands culturally safe care.
- 10–50% mild TBI persist >3 months (post-concussion syndrome).
- Assault-related TBI links domestic violence spikes.
BHRI's screening tool (BIST) aids GPs; unis push equity.
Prevention and Future Directions
Target falls (elderly/home safety), assaults (violence prevention), sports (rule changes). Unis develop biomarkers, AI prediction models.
Future: Longitudinal studies, personalised rehab, policy via ACC/Health NZ. Interested in TBI research? Visit NZ university jobs.
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Photo by BUDDHI Kumar SHRESTHA on Unsplash
Conclusion: Advancing TBI Research in NZ Universities
Debunking myths reveals TBI's broad reach, demanding interdisciplinary uni efforts. AUT, Auckland, Otago pioneer solutions, positioning NZ globally. Stay informed via higher ed jobs, career advice, professor reviews.



