TY - JOUR
T1 - The role of the Neuropsychologist across the stages of recovery from acquired brain injury
T2 - a summary from the pediatric rehabilitation Neuropsychology collaborative
AU - Watson, William D.
AU - Lahey, Sarah
AU - Baum, Katherine T.
AU - Hamner, Taralee
AU - Koterba, Christine H.
AU - Alvarez, Gabrielle
AU - Chan, Jana B.
AU - Davis, Kimberly C.
AU - DiVirgilio, Emily K.
AU - Howarth, Robyn A.
AU - Jones, Kelly
AU - Kramer, Megan
AU - Tlustos, Sarah J.
AU - Zafiris, Christina M.
AU - Slomine, Beth S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Neuropsychologists working in a pediatric neurorehabilitation setting provide care for children and adolescents with acquired brain injuries (ABI) and play a vital role on the interdisciplinary treatment team. This role draws on influences from the field of clinical neuropsychology and its pediatric subspecialty, as well as rehabilitation psychology. This combination of specialties is uniquely suited for working with ABI across the continuum of recovery. ABI recovery often involves a changing picture that spans across stages of recovery (e.g., disorders of consciousness, confusional state, acute cognitive impairment), where each stage presents with distinctive characteristics that warrant a specific evidence-based approach. Assessment and intervention are used reciprocally to inform diagnostics, treatment, and academic planning, and to support patient and family adjustment. Neuropsychologists work with the interdisciplinary teams to collect and integrate data related to brain injury recovery and use this data for treatment planning and clinical decision making. These approaches must often be adapted and adjusted in real time as patients recover, demanding a dynamic expertise that is currently not supported through formal training curriculum or practice guidelines. This paper outlines the roles and responsibilities of pediatric rehabilitation neuropsychologists across the stages of ABI recovery with the goal of increasing awareness in order to continue to develop and formalize this role.
AB - Neuropsychologists working in a pediatric neurorehabilitation setting provide care for children and adolescents with acquired brain injuries (ABI) and play a vital role on the interdisciplinary treatment team. This role draws on influences from the field of clinical neuropsychology and its pediatric subspecialty, as well as rehabilitation psychology. This combination of specialties is uniquely suited for working with ABI across the continuum of recovery. ABI recovery often involves a changing picture that spans across stages of recovery (e.g., disorders of consciousness, confusional state, acute cognitive impairment), where each stage presents with distinctive characteristics that warrant a specific evidence-based approach. Assessment and intervention are used reciprocally to inform diagnostics, treatment, and academic planning, and to support patient and family adjustment. Neuropsychologists work with the interdisciplinary teams to collect and integrate data related to brain injury recovery and use this data for treatment planning and clinical decision making. These approaches must often be adapted and adjusted in real time as patients recover, demanding a dynamic expertise that is currently not supported through formal training curriculum or practice guidelines. This paper outlines the roles and responsibilities of pediatric rehabilitation neuropsychologists across the stages of ABI recovery with the goal of increasing awareness in order to continue to develop and formalize this role.
KW - Cognitive recovery
KW - cognitive rehabilitation
KW - confusional state
KW - disorder of consciousness
KW - post-traumatic amnesia
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U2 - 10.1080/09297049.2022.2086691
DO - 10.1080/09297049.2022.2086691
M3 - Article
C2 - 35726723
AN - SCOPUS:85132779748
SN - 0929-7049
VL - 29
SP - 299
EP - 320
JO - Child Neuropsychology
JF - Child Neuropsychology
IS - 2
ER -