Neuropsychological and psychosocial assessment of 58 Victorian and Sou
th Australian school-aged children who sustained a closed head injury
was carried out immediately postinjury and at 6 months follow-up. For
those children whose head injury was defined as mild (length of coma l
ess than 1 hour) outcome on all variables was good at both time points
. Children with moderate to severe injury (length of coma greater than
1 hour) had lower WISC-R IQ scores at both time points and were parti
cularly poor on reading and spelling measures. There was no improvemen
t over time on the academic measures. Family and parental functioning
was in the normative range and, although some children showed a clinic
al level of behaviour problems, there was no consistency in their clin
ical status over time nor across parent and teacher informants. Our re
sults suggest that there are no particular concerns for the long-term
outcome of mildly head-injured children but that cognitive and school
learning problems for moderate to severely head-injured children puts
them at continuing risk.