www.strongarm.org.uk |
Cognitive Rehabilitation Software |
www.strongarm.org.uk
Cognitive
Rehabilitation Software
Cognitive rehabilitation
What is Cognitive Rehabilitation?
Cognitive rehabilitation is a structured set of therapeutic activities
designed to retrain an individual's ability to think, use judgement
and make decisions. The focus is on improving deficits in memory,
attention, perception, learning, planning, and judgement. The term,
cognitive rehabilitation, is applied to a variety of intervention
strategies or techniques that attempt to help patients reduce, manage
or cope with cognitive deficits caused by brain injury. The desired
outcome of cognitive rehabilitation is an improved quality of life or
an improved ability to function in home and community life.
Cognitive rehabilitation is a formal program of guided therapy to
learn (or relearn) ways to concentrate, remember, and solve problems
after an illness or injury affecting the brain. Also known as
neuropsychological rehabilitation, it involves recovery of cognitive
deficits through both restoration & compensation to improve memory,
concentration and logic.
Who can benefit from cognitive
rehabilitation?
Anyone who has experienced changes in their ability to concentrate,
think, remember things, or carry out a job, school, or household
duties, following an injury or disease, or who has non-progressive
brain damage and is interested in reducing his or her limitations
and increasing activities. Conditions may include:
* Traumatic brain injury
* Alzheimer's and similar neurological diseases
* Chronic physical pain
* Temporomandibular joint disorders (TMD)
* Anxiety and panic disorders
* Depression
* Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADD/ADHD)
* Learning disabilities and academic problems
* Chronic physical illness
* Emotional adjustment to medical problems
* Behaviour control problems
* Evaluations of people who don't speak English
* Forensic evaluations
|
Assessing your needs
First, a psychologist may use tests to evaluate strengths and
weaknesses in your thinking and memory skills. You may be asked what
problems in daily living you have noticed and what you would like to
achieve through rehabilitation. Evaluations may involve
neuropsychological, psychological, or chronic pain issues.
|
 |
* Neuropsychological Evaluations
Questions frequently are asked about your attention, language
functioning, mental flexibility, memory, problem solving and other
thinking skills. A wide range of instruments is used to assess
thinking problems in depth. Your personal history is also
considered. Understanding the full range of your functioning is a
key component in a thorough neuropsychological evaluation.
* Psychological Evaluations
The way in which you deal with a problem is frequently more
important than the actual physical problem. The emotional reaction
that you have to life stressors such as a significant loss or injury
can result in the quality of their life decreasing even further.
Likewise, living a whole life while having physical or emotional
issues is achievable for most people with serious problems.
Information obtained during the clinical interview provides the
foundation for our understanding of your psychological state. We
also utilize a wide range of psychological instruments to further
assess emotional issues.
* Chronic Pain Evaluations
Chronic physical pain, including facial pain and TMJ pain, can be
severely limiting for the person with the condition. Accurately
assessing the pain condition leads to interventions that can make a
significant difference in your ability to live a normal life. We
integrate information from other health care professionals into our
evaluations of people with chronic physical pain.
|
|
|
|
How long will cognitive
rehabilitation take?
Length of treatment depends on how much progress you make and your
ability to work toward your goals.
|
What to expect in the treatment program
Patients undergoing cognitive rehabilitation utilizing goal
planning can expect a program that focuses on practical, everyday
problems tailored to the needs of individuals, includes a measure of
outcome; and avoids the artificial distinction between some outcome
measures and real-life functioning.
Treatment may include both group and individual psychological
support to deal with issues such as changes in family status and
work relationships.
Goal-setting exercises may also take place, where the patient and
doctor work together to set reasonable long-term and short-term
goals, describe the patient's behaviour when the goal is reached,
set a deadline and spell out the method so that other patients may
benefit.
Your strengths and weaknesses may be evaluated at regular intervals
while in the program. Your family may participate if desired. You
will be expected to complete home exercises. A computer can be used
for home exercises if available.
|
 |
What can I expect after
cognitive rehabilitation?
Since the goals of cognitive rehabilitation are targeted to the
individual needs of each patient and their families, outcome
measures such as return to work or independent living can cause
problems when used to evaluate the effectiveness of the program.
Employment of the patient is subject to economic factors beyond the
control of the patient, and many independent living scales are not
clear at distinguishing between those families who were only just
coping with their brain-injured relatives before rehabilitation and
those who were considering long-term care yet and, after
rehabilitation, are coping more successfully.
|
