AboutInjury PrioritiesEducationPrograms & PartnershipsNews & EventsData & Surveillance
iDot © Main Page

Attention

We are currently updating our website. Please excuse any inconsistencies in our content or temporary disruptions during this time. Thank you.

Project to use virtual reality to help police recognize brain injuries

January 27, 2022
Concussion
Violence Prevention
A photo of the city of Medellín, Colombia

BCIRPU Associate Director Dr. Shelina Babul will collaborate with UBC Okanagan Professor Dr. Paul van Donkelaar on a project that will pilot a virtual reality training tool to help police recognize signs and symptoms of brain injury from concussion and strangulation in intimate partner violence.

The training tool will contain scenarios with possible head injury or strangulation events, enabling law enforcement to make more informed decisions about what to look for and when to seek medical support in a timely manner.

Intimate partner violence, or IPV, also known as domestic violence, family violence, and gender-based violence, disproportionately affects women, including those who are Indigenous, Black, people of colour, and sexual and gender minorities. It is estimated 230,000 women in Canada suffer severe physical violence at the hands of a partner every year. Up to 92% of these women may also experience a brain injury.

As police officers are often first on the scene to cases of IPV, the goal of this tool is to equip them with the knowledge and awareness needed to support increased recognition of when a brain injury may have occurred. The tool will aim to get faster medical attention to survivors of violence, ultimately reducing health care inequities and improving health outcomes.

Learn more about the project on cattonline.com.

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Recent Posts

Enhancing concussion care in Colombia
50 projects funded in this year's Vision Zero Program
Cheers to 25 Years!
Safety from a child’s point of view: The VOICES projects
Injury Insights: Research (April 2025)
What you need to know about button battery poisoning
Buckle up: Improving safety for kids in Japan
Dr. Mojgan Karbakhsh named director of Prevent Shaken Baby Syndrome BC
Meet the injury prevention leads
New grant funding for concussion, sports, and violence prevention research

The BC Injury Research and Prevention Unit is a leader in the production and transfer of injury prevention knowledge and the integration of evidence-based injury prevention practices in the daily lives of those at risk, those who care for them, and those with a mandate for public health and safety in British Columbia.

PROGRAMS & PARTNERSHIPS
Active & Safe Central
CATT Online
Canadian Safety Report Card
Cost of Injury Tool
Outside Play
Preventable
Prevent Shaken Baby Syndrome BC
Vision Zero BC
CONTACT US

F508 – 4480 Oak St.
Vancouver, BC, V6H 3V4
‍Email: bcinjury@bcchr.ca

LinkedIn logo
SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER!
Copyright © 2025 BCIRPU. All Rights Reserved | Terms of Use |
Privacy Policy