2022.10.13– Monitoring Brain Health in Individuals Exposed to Repetitive Head Impacts (Recorded Webinar)

A Mitchell Rosenthal Memorial Research recorded webinar featuring Jeff Bazarian, M.D., MPH.

To download the webinar, choose the “Download Now” option from the dropdown below. After completing the checkout process, you will receive an email with further instructions and a file that includes information about receiving your ACBIS CEU.


Aired live on October 13, 2022. Includes 1 ACBIS CEU. 

Note: A certificate of attendance/ACBIS CEU certificate will not be available with the purchase of this webinar after October 31, 2025.

Concern over the effect of repetitive head impacts sustained in sports and combat operations on long-term brain health has stimulated discussion on how to best mitigate these long-term effects. The history of radiation safety provides an instructive example of how emerging scientific knowledge of health risks was integrated with societal standards for acceptable risk to derive actionable, clinically relevant policies to mitigate long-term health effects.

 Learning Objectives

  1. Provide examples of the scientific evidence demonstrating short and long-term risks of exposure to repetitive head impacts.
  2. Discuss societal standards for acceptable risk.
  3. Compare and contrast the history of radiation safety to the history of safety in the context of repetitive head impacts.

If you select "Recorded Webinar - Download Now!" from the dropdown menu below, you will be prompted to continue to payment. When you have completed the checkout process, you will receive an email with further instructions. The file contained in this email also includes instructions about receiving your ACBIS CEU.

If you would like to purchase a CD, please select "CD/Handout Package, CBIS/T Rate (Includes 1 CEU)" from the drop-down menu. Please note: The CD may not be available for immediate shipping.

On-demand recorded webinars are non-refundable.

Jeffrey Bazarian, M.D., MPH, is a Professor of Emergency Medicine and Neurology at the University of Rochester. He is a graduate of Brown University and the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry. He is board-certified in Internal Medicine and Emergency Medicine but practiced Emergency Medicine exclusively for 22 years until 2012. In 2010, Dr. Bazarian joined the University of Rochester Sports Concussion Clinic, providing outpatient concussion care to area high school and collegiate athletes. Dr. Bazarian’s research is focused on developing neuroimaging and blood-based biomarkers of axonal injury after concussion and repetitive head hits, and the pathophysiologic mechanisms of recovery.