Cognitive Changes After Traumatic Brain Injury Are the Most Challenging

Posted by writer on Wednesday, October 12, 2011



effects of traumatic brain injury on the person's knowledge - the ability to think and learn - can be so overwhelming that it literally struggling to survive through each day. Barbara Webster hundredth led support groups for BIA Massachusetts and all too familiar with the struggles, frustrations and difficulties of rebuilding your life after a head injury.

She knows firsthand how to have your life changed dramatically after she escaped from a car accident with what everyone thought were minor injuries. Suddenly she was not able to perform his job or manage her household. Even the most simple tasks such as choosing her clothes in the morning, cooking dinner or making a grocery list felt overwhelming and send it back to krevet.Teže tried, the more stuck and became frustrated.

Not knowing the cause of her cognitive difficulties, she became so depressed she was afraid was going crazy, and even considering samoubojstvo.Noć went to parent-teacher meeting at school and heard a guest speaker talk about the brain injury was the beginning of turning his life around . She went to her first meeting of a support group for survivors and realized that her cognitive difficulties may be associated with her earlier accident and her so-called "mild" brain injury. Most importantly, she learned that the help and support. Bringing her husband to a meeting of the support group helped him figure out the cause of her difficulties and gave him a new perspective on what was wrong. He realized: "It was wrong" It's a head injury that was causing her to act and think the way it was.

Barbara Webster story is still too common. There is nothing "mild" injury to the brain. Since she only lost consciousness for a moment and had no physical injuries after her car accident, her brain injury was not diagnosed until many, many months later. After all, she looked good. But looks can be deceiving.

trauma to the brain can result in various physical, social, emotional, cognitive and behavioral changes. But it is cognitive change - the ability to process information, problem solve, make decisions, using sound judgment, pay attention and remember events and details - it is so often feel overwhelming to the individual. Family members often feel confused, frustrated and even angry is changing and I can not understand what happened. It can literally feel like in life - all that was known and familiar - it was lost. Finding and return of a lifetime begins with a diagnosis of injury mozga.Sljedeći step is finding specialists and therapists who are experienced and can provide treatment and rehabilitation services, the design of compensatory strategies, give advice and support to extend. Recovery is a process and journey that includes an individual, as well as their families. Barbara Webster can attest to the importance of hope, information, support and resources on brain injury in order to find, recover and rebuild their lives.

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