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“It’s all about freedom” – the charity making the ocean accessible to all

A charity founded by the first disabled man to sail across the Atlantic is giving people with complex disability the chance to experience the open water.

Last year, 6000 disabled people, many of them living with severe neurological conditions and complex disability, were given a rare opportunity to experience the freedom of the open sea. The voyages were organised by Wetwheels Foundation, a charity founded in 2011 by disabled yachtsman Geoff Holt MBE. Holt was the first disabled person to sail around the British Isles and the first to sail across the Atlantic. He was already helping disabled people access the joys of the ocean as chairman of the Royal Yachting Association’s Sailability, a project that has allowed 20,000 disabled people to experience sailing. But there was a gap for people with more complex and severe conditions.
By |2024-01-16T11:55:43+00:0012 April 2023|News, Brain injury|

How brain injury and couples’ relationships study could shape better support

A new research study aims to look at the impact an acquired brain injury has on couples’ relationships in a bid to learn more about what support is needed.

By |2024-07-04T17:33:54+01:0011 April 2023|Research, News, Brain injury, Neuropsychology|

Jamie MoCrazy: My mountain climb back from the brink

Life changed in the blink of an eye for the world class professional skier following a horrific crash on the slopes. Here she shares her traumatic brain injury story with Emma Chesworth.

Jamie MoCrazy saw her life change in an instant while she was competing in the World Tour Finals in Whistler, Canada in April 2015. Aged 22, she was at the top of the slopestyle freestyle skiing world, when she suffered a massive crash at the Finals, causing her brain to bleed in eight spots and paralysis on her right side. For Jamie, skiing had been her life. She says: “I started skiing as soon as I could walk. My whole family skied so it was a lifestyle for me. I also competed in gymnastics as a young child and I dreamed of combining skiing and gymnastics. When I learned about slopestyle and halfpipe skiing, two kinds of freestyle skiing, that dream became a reality.” Jamie, from Park City, Utah, went on to be a world cup professional skier competing at international competitions including the Dew Tour, X Games and the AFP World Championships. Following her life-changing crash eight years ago, Jamie’s challenge changed from competing to surviving.
By |2024-07-04T17:33:54+01:0010 April 2023|Patient stories, Brain injury, Concussion, News|
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