| RECOVERY
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to Brain Injury 101 ]
If one defines recovery as complete restoration of the person
to who he was before the TBI with all the same abilities and
the same level of performance of daily activities, the likelihood
of recovery decreases as the severity of the TBI increases.
For very severe TBI (e.g. patients with post-traumatic amnesia
of one month or more) there is no chance of recovery in that
sense of the word. For patients with very mild TBI, the odds
of recovery in that sense of the word are fairly good, but
without any guarantee. Physiatrists and other "rehabilitationists"
who care for TBI patients in the post-acute setting, tend
to use the terms "recovery" in a different sense.
For them, recovery stands for the process by which the patient
gains awareness of his deficits, works to improve them, accepts
the permanence of the ones which fail to improve beyond a
certain point, practices and masters new strategies of thinking
and behaving to compensate for those deficits, readjusts personal
goals to conform in a realistic manner to objective limitations
of function, and learns to find pride and pleasure in achieving
the new goals rather than making oneself sulky or angry at
persistent failure to achieve pre-injury goals which are now
out of reach. With all that said, rehabilitationists strive
always to keep hope alive while offering a realistic perspective.
To deprive a TBI person of hope is to doom him to non-recovery.
No one can know or predict in advance exactly how far a given
patient will move beyond her early deficits. Clinicians
have published accounts of near miracles. Robust health, solid
education and good attitude before the TBI certainly help
as do the presence of loving, supportive and encouraging family
or friends.
With regard to the rehabilitation process, for severe, and
some cases of moderate brain injury, recovery will begin in
the hospital, continue in a post-acute rehabilitation facility
and then proceed on an out-patient basis with varying degrees
of in-home assistance or follow-up home assessments. Cognitive
therapy, occupational therapy, behavioral therapy and vocational
rehabilitation with job coaching may be used. Persons with
mild brain injury will have an assisted recovery only if a
diagnosis is made. When the diagnosis is made the "assistance"
may involve outpatient neuropsychological evaluation and counseling,
anti-depressant medication, individual psychotherapy and sometimes
family as well, support group meetings and medical care for
problems like migraine, double vision, falling, insomnia,
etc. Recovery tends to progress most quickly for the physical
symptoms, more slowly for the deficits in thinking and slowest
for behavioral problems like depression, irritability, lost
impulse control, etc. Rules of thumb on recovery for mild
brain injury indicate that many persons recover substantially
within the first 3-6 months and most by 12 months. It is often
stated little or no recovery can be expected beyond 18-24
months post-injury, and that approximately 10-15% of persons
diagnosed with mild brain injury will have permanent problems
(the "miserable minority").
These rules of thumb are statistical generalizations covering
a highly diverse population and do not always predict what
will happen to any one person. They are also more accurate
for the obvious physical and cognitive impairments not the
more subtle behavioral ones like changed personality. It has
also been proven that some persons with brain injury do benefit
positively from various forms of rehabilitation even 7-10
years after their injury. The duration and completeness of
recovery will be affected by many variables including severity
of initial injury, age, previous education, previous employment
situation, existing psychological strengths or weaknesses,
personality type and coping style, alcohol or drug abuse triggered
by or exacerbated by the injuries, existence or non-existence
of supportive family and friends, denial of deficits caused
by organic damage to the brain or due unconscious refusal
to acknowledge them, depression, and stress from job loss,
debt, marital conflict, disputes over insurance benefits,
tort litigation and other difficulties associated with the
injuries.
One tragic statistic is that only 1 out of every 20 persons
with a TBI receives truly comprehensive and adequate rehabilitation
services. This can change only with increased education of
the public, and advocacy by TBI organizations directed at
government officials, HMO executives and other "gatekeepers"
to medical services. One exception is the American Academy
of Neurology, which fully grasps the tragedy of insufficient
rehab services to persons with a TBI and other persons with
chronic neurologic conditions. The AAN is spending its own
money to promote patient advocacy efforts.
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