| PSYCHOLOGICAL
CONSIDERATIONS [ back
to Brain Injury 101 ]
Psychological considerations are of supreme importance in
good recovery from brain injury. True restoration of the person
means not just walking, talking and returning to work (of
some type) but restoration of hope, purpose, goals and self-esteem.
Brain injury is psychologically shattering because it reduces
the survivor's control over his mind, body, moods and environment;
and in doing so it challenges his core identity and forces
him ultimately to give up or go through a healing process
of denial, anger, grieving, acceptance and rebirth. The new
life is one shaped around who he is, not who he was, around
what he can still do, not what he used to do. The brain injured
person needs help with his anger, rage, depression and apathy.
Lithium for anger and anti-depressants for suicidal thoughts
are not enough. An understanding and supportive psychotherapist
is essential to guide the person through all the changes
post-injury and help him reach the other side. When
choosing a therapist, try to find someone with experience
counseling brain injured people. Consumer satisfaction tends
to be much higher with therapists who work directly on the
patient's cognitive and behavioral problems rather than
focusing on the "dynamics" of the therapist-patient
relationship (See Harvard Mental Health Letter Feb. 2000).
Getting in touch with faith, spirituality or one's own "core"
values can improve attitude and boost morale. Research on
how people handle pain shows that positive thinking and hopefulness
can stimulate the hypothalamus to instruct the pituitary to
secrete natural pain blockers called endorphins, and bring
about pain relief. Depression and pain re-enforce each other.
One way to jump start a TBI patient is to get him into a TBI
support group. This can bring open, honest talk with,
and emotional solidarity with, people in the same boat, and
lessens the feelings of being isolated or being the only one
to go through it.
How doctors, family members, friends, employers and co-employees
react to a brain injured person is important. When they show
impatience, frustration and disappointment, and turn away,
the injured person's tendency towards shame, avoidance and
self-ostracism will be promoted. Counseling and education
are not just for the injured person, but should be directed
at significant others. The Law Office of Harvey A. Hyman is
very sensitive to the psychological dimension of brain injury,
the client’s need for psychotherapy by a qualified person
(such as a clinical neuropsychologist) and anti-depressant
medication and the importance of having the client’s
family educated and counseled in how best to deal with their
brain injured loved one at a time of maximum stress. Harvey
Hyman is also sensitive to the pain, humiliation and anger
felt by persons with mild brain injury when they are disbelieved
and branded malingerers or hysterics by defense counsel and
the defense experts in neurology and psychiatry.
In litigation the insurance company attorney will almost always
question the persistence of symptoms, and suggest that psychological
factors (not the brain injury) is the primary factor perpetuating
the plaintiff's complaints. Older medical research suggests
that most persons with "mild" TBI (equivalent to
concussion with zero or minimal loss of consciousness) are
symptom free in about 3 months, and only a minority of patients
(around 10%) are still symptomatic from the brain injury at
the end of 12 months post-injury. Newer research shows the
% of patients with impairment or disability from a "mild"
TBI at 12 months may be significantly higher. Until the newer
research is duplicated and validated, cases will revolve around
the organic vs. psychological explanations. Defense experts
frequently point to pre-existing depression or psycho-somatic
illness as a reason someone would unconsciously choose to
feel ill and to "play the sick role" long after
the organic cause of the illness was gone. They also blame
doctors, attorneys and even TBI support groups for "iatrogenic
causation," i.e. working to convince the patient he is
worse off than he really is. This accusation can lead to bitter
disputes. Sometimes the issue of organicity can be decided
with a PET scan, which may show significant metabolic disturbances
in the brain secondary to trauma in a person mistakenly labeled
by the defense as a faker or hysteric. Sometimes the issue
is more clouded, and consideration may be given to alternative
explanations such as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, Chronic
Pain Disorder or other "co-morbid" disorders suffered
along with the mild TBI. Sometimes what would have been a
short lived concussion in one person, proves to be the "straw
that broke the camel's back," because the victim had
pre-existing burdens and could not shoulder the weight of
the mild TBI. These may include learning disability, depressive
disorder, anxiety disorder and others.
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