Or. Admin. R. 581-015-2175 - Traumatic Brain Injury
(1)
Definition of Traumatic Brain Injury: For early intervention, early childhood
special education, and school age special education, "Traumatic Brain Injury"
means an acquired injury to the brain caused by an external physical force,
resulting in total or partial functional disability or psychosocial impairment,
or both. Traumatic brain injury applies to open or closed head injuries
resulting in impairments in one or more areas, such as cognition; language;
memory; attention; reasoning; abstract thinking; judgment; problem-solving;
sensory, perceptual, and motor abilities; psychosocial behavior; physical
functions; information processing; and speech. Traumatic brain injury does not
apply to brain injuries that are congenital or degenerative, or brain injuries
induced by birth trauma. Students with brain injuries that are congenital or
degenerative, or brain injuries induced by birth trauma, are not eligible under
the category of traumatic brain injury but may be eligible under a different
category.
(a) For early intervention: The
impairments should currently affect or have the potential to significantly
affect an infant or toddler's developmental progress. The infant or toddler's
disability does not need to be presently affecting their development for the
infant or toddler to be eligible for early intervention services.
(b) For early childhood and school age
special education: The acquired injury to the brain must adversely affects a
child's developmental progress (age 3 to 5) or educational performance (age 5
to 21).
(2)
Comprehensive Evaluation: If a child is suspected of having a traumatic brain
injury, a comprehensive evaluation must be conducted, including the following:
(a) A medical examination as defined in OAR
581-015-2000 or, with documentation of sufficient efforts by the Local
Education Agency to obtain appropriate medical information through a medical
examination and evidence that such information cannot be obtained, guided
credible history interview process indicating that an event may have resulted
in a traumatic brain injury;
(b)
The guided credible history interview process is an interview facilitated by an
individual familiar with the symptoms of a traumatic brain injury to thoroughly
explore a family's report of a possible traumatic brain injury. The guided
credible history interview process must:
(A)
Document one or more traumatic brain injuries,
(B) Be reported by a reliable and credible
source, and
(C) Be corroborated by
more than one reporter.
(c) A psychological assessment. A
comprehensive psychological assessment using a battery of instruments intended
to identify deficits associated with a traumatic brain injury administered and
interpreted by a school psychologist licensed by Oregon Teacher Standards and
Practices Commission (TSPC), a psychologist or a psychologist associate
licensed under Chapter 675 by the Oregon Board of Psychological Examiners
(OBPE), or in the case of a student from another state an individual similarly
credentialed in another state;
(d)
A developmental history as defined in OAR 581-015-2000; and
(e) Other:
(A) Other assessments including, but not
limited to, motor assessments if the child exhibits motor impairments;
communication assessments if the child exhibits a speech or language
impairment; and psychosocial assessments if the child exhibits changed
behavior. These assessments must be completed by qualified personnel
knowledgeable in the specific area being assessed;
(B) Other information related to the child's
suspected disability, including pre-injury performance and a current measure of
adaptive ability;
(C) An
observation in at least two different settings. For early childhood and school
age special education, an observation in the classroom and in at least one
other setting;
(D) Any additional
assessments necessary to determine the impact of the suspected disability:
(i) On the child's developmental progress for
a child age birth to 5; or
(ii) On
the child's educational performance for a child age 5 to 21.
(3)
Eligibility Criteria: To be eligible as a child with a traumatic brain injury
for early intervention, early childhood special education, or school age
special education services, the child must meet all of the following criteria:
(a) The child has an acquired injury to the
brain caused by an external physical force;
(b) The child's condition is permanent or
expected to last for more than 60 calendar days; and
(c) The child's injury results in an
impairment of one or more of the following areas:
(A) Communication;
(B) Behavior;
(C) Cognition, memory, attention, abstract
thinking, judgment, problem-solving, reasoning, and/or information processing;
or
(D) Sensory, perceptual, motor,
and/or physical abilities.
(4) Eligibility Determination: For a child to
be eligible for early intervention, early childhood special education, or
school age special education services as a child with a traumatic brain injury,
the eligibility team must determine that:
(a)
The child has a traumatic brain injury as defined in this rule; and
(b) By reason thereof, the child requires
early intervention (OAR 581-015-2780), early childhood special education (OAR
581-015-2795), or school age special education (OAR 581-015-2120)
services.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 343.035(1), 343.045, 343.146 & 343.157;
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 343.035(1), 343.045, 343.146, 343.157, 34 CFR 300.8 & 300.306
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
(1) Definition of Traumatic Brain Injury: For early intervention, early childhood special education, and school age special education, "Traumatic Brain Injury" means an acquired injury to the brain caused by an external physical force, resulting in total or partial functional disability or psychosocial impairment, or both. Traumatic brain injury applies to open or closed head injuries resulting in impairments in one or more areas, such as cognition; language; memory; attention; reasoning; abstract thinking; judgment; problem-solving; sensory, perceptual, and motor abilities; psychosocial behavior; physical functions; information processing; and speech. Traumatic brain injury does not apply to brain injuries that are congenital or degenerative, or brain injuries induced by birth trauma. Students with brain injuries that are congenital or degenerative, or brain injuries induced by birth trauma, are not eligible under the category of traumatic brain injury but may be eligible under a different category.
(a) For early intervention: The impairments should currently affect or have the potential to significantly affect an infant or toddler's developmental progress. The infant or toddler's disability does not need to be presently affecting their development for the infant or toddler to be eligible for early intervention services.
(b) For early childhood and school age special education: The acquired injury to the brain must adversely affects a child's developmental progress (age 3 to 5) or educational performance (age 5 to 21).
(2) Comprehensive Evaluation: If a child is suspected of having a traumatic brain injury, a comprehensive evaluation must be conducted, including the following:
(a) A medical examination as defined in OAR 581-015-2000 or, with documentation of sufficient efforts by the Local Education Agency to obtain appropriate medical information through a medical examination and evidence that such information cannot be obtained, guided credible history interview process indicating that an event may have resulted in a traumatic brain injury;
(b) The guided credible history interview process is an interview facilitated by an individual familiar with the symptoms of a traumatic brain injury to thoroughly explore a family's report of a possible traumatic brain injury. The guided credible history interview process must:
(A) Document one or more traumatic brain injuries,
(B) Be reported by a reliable and credible source, and
(C) Be corroborated by more than one reporter.
(c) A psychological assessment. A comprehensive psychological assessment using a battery of instruments intended to identify deficits associated with a traumatic brain injury administered and interpreted by a school psychologist licensed by Oregon Teacher Standards and Practices Commission (TSPC), a psychologist or a psychologist associate licensed under Chapter 675 by the Oregon Board of Psychological Examiners (OBPE), or in the case of a student from another state an individual similarly credentialed in another state;
(d) A developmental history as defined in OAR 581-015-2000; and
(e) Other:
(A) Other assessments including, but not limited to, motor assessments if the child exhibits motor impairments; communication assessments if the child exhibits a speech or language impairment; and psychosocial assessments if the child exhibits changed behavior. These assessments must be completed by qualified personnel knowledgeable in the specific area being assessed;
(B) Other information related to the child's suspected disability, including pre-injury performance and a current measure of adaptive ability;
(C) An observation in at least two different settings. For early childhood and school age special education, an observation in the classroom and in at least one other setting;
(D) Any additional assessments necessary to determine the impact of the suspected disability:
(i) On the child's developmental progress for a child age birth to 5; or
(ii) On the child's educational performance for a child age 5 to 21.
(3) Eligibility Criteria: To be eligible as a child with a traumatic brain injury for early intervention, early childhood special education, or school age special education services, the child must meet all of the following criteria:
(a) The child has an acquired injury to the brain caused by an external physical force;
(b) The child's condition is permanent or expected to last for more than 60 calendar days; and
(c) The child's injury results in an impairment of one or more of the following areas:
(A) Communication;
(B) Behavior;
(C) Cognition, memory, attention, abstract thinking, judgment, problem-solving, reasoning, and/or information processing; or
(D) Sensory, perceptual, motor, and/or physical abilities.
(4) Eligibility Determination: For a child to be eligible for early intervention, early childhood special education, or school age special education services as a child with a traumatic brain injury, the eligibility team must determine that:
(a) The child has a traumatic brain injury as defined in this rule; and
(b) By reason thereof, the child requires early intervention (OAR 581-015-2780), early childhood special education (OAR 581-015-2795), or school age special education (OAR 581-015-2120) services.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 343.035(1), 343.045, 343.146 & 343.157;
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 343.035(1), 343.045, 343.146, 343.157, 34 CFR 300.8 & 300.306