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So far Andrew Mernin has created 640 blog entries.

Case managers to resume face to face rehab

Most case managers are now making referrals to residential programmes, replacing the ‘virtual first’ approach adopted over the last four months, according to a survey by Calvert Reconnections, a neurorehabilitation residential centre in the Lake District.

One in ten case managers said they’re making referrals to residential-based programmes now, while 70 percent said they expect to be doing so in the next three months. Only five percent said they won’t be making the transition back to offline programmes for at least six months.

However, the survey of 152 case managers also found that 85 percent feel that virtual treatment has been essential for meeting their clients' rehab and mental health needs over the lockdown period.

By |2024-07-04T17:47:01+01:0028 July 2020|News|

New guidance asks judges to consider brain injury when sentencing

Courts have, up to now, relied on interpreting previous cases when dealing with offenders with mental disorders, states the Sentencing Council. From 1 October, judges and magistrates in England and Wales will use new guidance for adults with mental health, neurological and developmental disorders, including acquired brain injuries (ABI). This includes people with tumour, stroke, haemorrhage, encephalitis, carbon monoxide poisoning, hypoxic injury and trauma. Culpability may be reduced if an offender had an ABI at the time of offending, but only if there’s sufficient evidence of a connection between their injury and their offending behaviour. In some cases, the guidance states, their culpability could be significantly reduced.

By |2024-07-04T17:47:01+01:0024 July 2020|News|

“I felt like someone had broken in and stolen my energy”

The internet can often feel like a vapid place, propped up by self-interested, shallow interactions as users compete for the most subscribers, views and shares.

But reluctant YouTuber James Inkson Stevens has what most content creators don’t; he’s in regular contact with at least half of his subscribers.

He sometimes gets frustrated with making videos, and finds the process very tiring, but keeping Stevens going is the memory of how alone he felt 16 months ago, after he was assaulted and left with a traumatic brain injury.

Stevens, 35, was working as an actor in London before he decided to move back to Southampton, where his family live, to buy a flat.

By |2024-07-04T17:47:01+01:0024 July 2020|News|

‘Excluded’, ‘stigmatised’ and ‘feeling inadequate’

More than nine in 10 people with a neurological disorder face stigma because of their condition, mostly from medical professionals, according to a study.

The survey, by the organisation that represents European organisations across neurological diseases, suggests that most of this stigma comes from medical professionals who don't appear to believe patients’ symptoms.

The 1,300+ respondents to the European Federation of Neurological Association’s (EFNA) poll had a range of disorders including ME, migraine or headaches, epilepsy, Parkinson’s and chronic pain.

Around 75 per cent of people reported feeling as though they didn’t receive adequate treatment because a medical professional didn’t take them seriously, while just over a third avoided seeking medical advice because they felt embarrassed.

By |2024-07-04T17:47:01+01:0024 July 2020|News|

New findings on footballers and head injuries

Former football players are around half as likely to be admitted to hospital for anxiety and stress related disorders, depression, drug and alcohol-use disorders, and bipolar and affective mood disorders.

They’re also no more likely to die by suicide than a control group, according to research involving data on more than 7,000 former professional football players.

There is growing awareness of the greater risk of neurodegenerative disease among contact sports players.

Among former professional football players, it is around three-and-a-half-fold higher than anticipated, the study states.

By |2024-07-04T17:47:01+01:0023 July 2020|News|

Capacity and sexual relations

When looking at the question of capacity to consent to sexual relations, the Courts have historically held that the threshold is low, but a recent judgment of the Court of Appeal has expanded the test for capacity in relation to sexual relations, and has held that the relevant question is whether the person has the mental capacity to engage in sexual relations, rather than to consent to sexual relations.

Presumption of capacity

The question of capacity is issue and time specific. A person must be assumed to have capacity to make any decision unless it is established that he lacks capacity [Section 1 (2) of the Mental Capacity Act 2005].

By |2024-07-04T17:47:01+01:0022 July 2020|News, Legal|

From brain injury to Bafta

When they first got together, Paul and Lindsay Devereux didn’t seem like the most obvious match. Paul was from Dublin, and he ticked more than a few of the stereotypical Dubliner boxes – he liked a pint and didn’t take himself too seriously, and he had a thick Dublin accent. Lindsay was the sensible one. She was a nurse from Scotland, with a master’s degree. But they clicked. They both loved travel and adventure, and travelled the world together, driving through the US in a campervan

By |2024-07-04T17:47:01+01:0021 July 2020|News|

Time for domestic abuse legislation – Lord Ramsbotham

Earlier this month, MP Chris Bryant put forward two amendments to the Domestic Abuse Bill, stated that female prisoners must be screened for acquired brain injury, including concussion, within two weeks of starting their sentence. Bryant also put forward an amendment that women who have been the subject of domestic abuse should be screened for traumatic brain injury. Ramsbotham is in touch with Bryant and has told NR Times he will take the amendments through the House of Lords, propose them at second reading and follow them through to the committee stage. “I'm looking forward to the Domestic Abuse bill coming to our house in the autumn. I think they will have a lot of support because there’s a lot of cross-party interest in all these issues,” he says.

By |2024-07-04T17:47:01+01:0021 July 2020|News|

Study highlights cycling / concussion blind-spot

Eighty-seven per cent of cyclists believe helmets can prevent concussion, according to a survey of cyclists in New Zealand. While most participants said they wore a helmet when cycling, many misunderstood how to best use helmets to help prevent head injury. Nine in ten agreed that a helmet should be replaced after a fall, but just over a third had not replaced their helmet after an accident and continued to use it. Many respondents reported cracking or otherwise damaging their helmet but didn’t feel at any increased risk of concussion.

By |2024-07-04T17:47:01+01:0021 July 2020|Research, News|

More retired rugby players report concussion than any other injury

Researchers from Durham University and Auckland University of Technology compared the injuries of retired rugby athletes with retired non-contact athletes.

They found that retired elite rugby athletes reported up to seven times the number of injuries than those who played amateur rugby and non-contact sports, and concussion was the most commonly reported injury, and had the most common recurrence, for both groups of rugby players compared to non-contact athletes.

By |2024-07-04T17:47:02+01:0017 July 2020|News|
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