Rehabilitation Pioneers
Rodger Wood and Mike Oddy look back at the Trust's move into
brain injury rehabilitation in the early 1990s.
Rodger Wood: In the 1980s I was working in California developing
community-based rehabilitation services for people who had suffered a brain
injury, maybe as a result of a car accident or stroke. The Disabilities Trust
approached me and asked if I would help them develop something similar in the
UK.
Mike Oddy: At that time all brain injury rehabilitation in the
UK took place in hospital. The Disabilities Trust was proposing a different,
more community-based approach. I remember being impressed. I could see the approach
was realistic and could work.
RW: The Trust's first brain injury service opened in Milton Keynes
in 1991. We wanted the service to be based in the community and have a non-institutional
feel, because the goal of post-acute rehabilitation is to reintegrate people
into their communities. Professionals from all the relevant disciplines worked
together in inter-disciplinary teams too, which was pretty radical then.
MO: At the time it was far more common to emphasise the physical
aspects of brain injury, whereas the Trust was focussing on changing behaviour
- what we termed the 'neurobehavioural approach'.
RW: Appropriate social behaviour is the key to successful rehabilitation.
It's not just about fixing arms and legs so that people can walk and talk again.
It's about making sure that what they say and do when they recover these abilities
is socially appropriate, allowing them to re-integrate into society.
MO: It's also become clearer that people can continue to benefit
from rehabilitation even ten years or more after their injury. We didn't understand
that so clearly 10-15 years ago.
RW: We've learned a lot about how people with brain injury learn.
They learn by doing, not by understanding. Therefore, community-based rehabilitation
is about helping people re-establish social and functional habit patterns that
contribute to independent living.
MO: The way we measure success has enlarged too. We don't just
base our success on whether people can carry out specific tasks, but whether
they have the skills to undertake the roles that are important in their lives
- whether as a parent, employee, partner or friend.
Rodger Wood was Clinical Director of The Brain Injury Rehabilitation
Trust, a division of The Disabilities Trust, until 2001. Mike Oddy is the current
Clinical Director.
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