The number of New Zealanders with traumatic brain injuries has reached "epidemic levels", with a new injury occurring on average every 15 minutes, a world-first study has revealed.
The number is significantly higher than in other developed countries, and children, young adults, men, Maori and rural inhabitants are most at risk of sustaining one, Auckland researchers found.
Previous statistics "grossly underestimated the extent of traumatic brain injury in New Zealand", said lead researcher Professor Valery Feigin from AUT University's National Institute for Stroke and Applied Neuroscience.
Instead the research, published today in prestigious international medical journal The Lancet, found that each year an estimated 36,000 new traumatic brain injuries (TBI) occur - far surpassing the number of heart attacks and more than five times the number of new strokes.
Most were due to falls, 38 per cent, followed by mechanical forces, transport accidents, and assaults.