| EFFECTS
ON THE FAMILY [ back
to Brain Injury 101 ]
A TBI occurring to one member of a family has immediate and
long term emotional, social and financial consequences to
the family as a whole. A severe TBI to one member will stress
the family, test it and change it forever. Some families are
devastated and fall apart. Others pull closer and become stronger
in the face of challenge and adversity. The perspective of
the family on TBI will always be different from that of the
treating doctors. The family has an open-ended horizon and
wants to know what comes next, and how do we deal with it?
Doctors seek closure. They are concerned with the survival,
stabilization and discharge of the patient from the hospital,
so they can move onto the next trauma victim. How much a family
should be told at the hospital depends in part upon how much
information they want and are ready to handle at that moment.
While a few doctors may dump too much negative news, too fast,
most err on the side of not disclosing enough and failing
to the give the family a detailed roadmap of what lies ahead.
In general doctors will meet with the family just before discharge
and impart generic "information" about TBI along
with a prognosis based on group statistics rather than an
individualized study of the patient. Many families are in
"denial" about just how impaired their loved one
is when he first comes home or at least naive about what is
likely to happen. Very understandably they are thankful he
survived, excited to get him back home at last and eager to
celebrate every little sign of progress to reassure themselves
things will be OK. Statistical studies show the average family
does better coping the first year than it does the 5th year
out. Between the 1st and the 5th year, progress in recovery
slows, and the family comes to understand that certain cognitive
and behavioral problems are not going to go away, and that
their injured member will remain dependent on them.
During this extended time frame, the family becomes socially
isolated because of the huge demands of caregiving and lack
of opportunity to socialize with friends. Very often the caregiving
spouse experiences clinically significant distress, anxiety,
tension and depression, which merits psychological intervention,
even medication, for the caregiver. Caregiver burnout
and family deterioration are likely to result in the absence
of outside support. How could any family know at the outset
how difficult this would be or prepared to meet all the objective
and subjective burdens? This is not their fault. There are
no courses in high school or college for this, and it is certainly
not common knowledge. What can be done to make things easier,
and bring hope and help to these families?
Certain types of outside supports have proven valuable in
keeping the family afloat. Respite care involves a paid helper
or volunteer watching the injured family member, while the
caretaker gets to refresh herself with an activity of her
choice, be it extra sleep, a movie, a walk in the park or
having coffee with a friend. Social skills training to the
family member with the TBI is very useful. To the extent he
learned things like how to take turns in conversation and
how to avoid stressful social situations which cause overload,
he can leave the house more to be with others. Job training
will improve his self-confidence and self-esteem and provide
chances to socialize. Recreational outings will put some fun
back into his life and increase his sense of being part of
the community again. Having the injured family member and
caregivers participate in a TBI support group is very helpful.
This is a place to share common experiences and feel less
alone, to learn new coping skills and strategies and become
more informed.
The neuro-rehabilitation literature establishes that the skills
learned during in-patient rehab are not easily retained or
easily transferred to the home environment; and that a great
deal of practice, repetition and reenforcement are needed.
To make rehab work there must be a direct extension of rehab
into the home. Ideally there should be frequent, open-ended
communication between treating doctors and family members
after the patient was discharged from care. Families find
hospital consultations to be of limited value when the doctor
is lecturing to or "talking at" them, rather than
listening empathetically to their concerns and seeking ways
to support them in their role as lifelong caretakers. What
most families says they want is for the doctor to visit the
house, see for himself what is going wrong in the actual home
environment and coach the whole family on new strategies.
What do families have to deal with? Examples include: an adult
child who is always late because he constantly loses his keys,
wallet or glasses; a parent who cannot be taken to a restaurant
or movie theatre because he uses profanity in a loud, booming
voice or laughs loudly and uncontrollably at things only he
finds funny; a family member who keep touching and poking
other people during conversation, who will not stop no matter
how annoyed or upset people get at him; or one who seems always
to take too much or too little of his prescription medication,
getting himself sick in the process, no matter how hard the
family tries to devise a system for proper medication use.
These burdens are great but can be handled with the right
mixture of patience, humor and a strong belief system, be
it religion, the value of self-reliance or other. Organizations
including TBI support groups, the state brain injury association
and caregivers' alliances should be contacted and asked for
assistance. If there is a personal injury claim, then the
attorney representing the brain injured loved one, can also
be a source of informational guidance, physician referral,
social service referral and emotional support. If workers
compensation or the HMO is willing to pay for the services
of a case manager, this is a great help, because a certified
case manager has access to huge web of services, and knows
how to access them at lowest cost. There is no doubt that
the survival and well being of the family are linked with
the survival and well being of the family member with TBI.
If they become overwhelmed and burnt out, the TBI survivor
suffers and so do the other children, whose emotional development
can be harmed. But if they get the help they need and grow
into their new roles, everyone will make it.
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