Symptômes persistants de commotion cérébrale

Des recherches canadiennes montrent que près de 40 % des jeunes âgés de 13 à 17 ans présentent des symptômes post-commotionnels persistants, c’est-à-dire des symptômes de commotion cérébrale qui durent plus d’un mois. Aider les jeunes athlètes à obtenir les soins dont ils ont besoin après une commotion cérébrale, par exemple en les orientant vers un médecin, peut réduire la probabilité qu’ils présentent des symptômes persistants de commotion cérébrale et les aider à reprendre plus tôt les activités qu’ils aiment.

Subscribe to Updates
News travels fast. Stay connected to sport and physical activity-related knowledge, news and resources through SIRC’s daily newsletter – delivered straight to your inbox.
Latest Knowledge Nuggets

SIGN up for Canadian sport daily

News travels fast. Stay connected to sport and physical activity-related knowledge, news and resources through SIRC’s daily newsletter – delivered straight to your inbox.

Help us, help you by completing SIRC’s new annual survey!

As Canada’s national Sport Information Resource Centre (SIRC), we’re here to support those involved in sport at all levels in Canada with the latest insights and resources. We want to know what you find most valuable about SIRC in our new survey!

Through your answers, we hope to learn the best ways to support you by providing the latest insights and resources that have the most impact.

Sign up to Our Newsletter

News travels fast. Stay connected to sport and physical activity-related knowledge, news, jobs and resources through SIRC’s daily newsletter — The Canadian Sport Daily — delivered straight to your inbox.

"*" indicates required fields

Groups*
Skip to content