Barbara A. Wilson is a neuropsychologist and founder of the Oliver Zangwill Centre for Neuropsychological Rehabilitation in Ely, UK. She has worked in brain injury rehabilitation for over 35 years and has published 18 books, 270 journal articles and chapters and 8 neuropsychological tests. Among her many awards she has an OBE and two lifetime achievement awards. She is the editor of the journal Neuropsychological Rehabilitation and has a rehabilitation centre in Ecuador named after her. Jill Winegardner is a clinical neuropsychologist with 30 years' experience in brain injury assessment and rehabilitation. She has worked in a range of settings including acute inpatient, acute and post-acute rehabilitation, residential rehabilitation and outpatient care. She is currently lead clinical psychologist at the Oliver Zangwill Centre for Neuropsychological Rehabilitation. Her clinical and research interests include neuropsychological assessment and rehabilitation and programme design and evaluation. Fiona Ashworth is a clinical psychologist with over ten years' experience in working with people with acquired brain injury. Since completing her doctorate in clinical psychology at the University of Oxford, she has worked for five years at the Oliver Zangwill Centre for neuropsychological rehabilitation. She is currently a senior lecturer in psychology at Anglia Ruskin University. Fiona also continues to work as a clinical psychologist at the Evelyn Community Head Injury Service, a project developed by the Oliver Zangwill Centre.
This unique and fascinating book portrays rehabilitation at its best: as a partnership between the therapist and the participant. Each chapter describes the process of rehabilitation assessment and treatment from the perspectives of both participant and therapist. Therapeutic alliance has received increasing attention in rehabilitation as a critical element for successful outcomes. Life After Brain Injury embodies and illustrates the mutual respect, empathy and goal orientation that characterises an effective therapeutic alliance. Reading this book should give both new and seasoned therapists a clear sense of what therapeutic engagement really means, and individuals with brain injury renewed hope that life can continue to improve after brain injury. - James F. Malec, Indiana University, USA This book provides a rare opportunity to hear the voices of individuals with brain injury as they describe the lows and highs of their personal journeys from injury through rehabilitation. The reader learns about a variety of individualised therapeutic approaches to the problems experienced by people with brain injuries. It highlights the importance of a collaborative approach to rehabilitation. - Jennie Ponsford, Monash University, Australia Life After Brain Injury: Survivors' Stories takes a unique approach by depicting people's own account of adjustment to their brain injury, in partnership with their therapist. Such stories powerfully convey the everyday implications of brain injury and offer readers new insights about the brain, about experience-guided rehabilitation and the work of neuropsychologists. Much can be learned from the courage, tenacity and ingenuity of the survivors and the rehabilitation process provided by their therapists. Each story will provide clinicians with ideas and inspiration in their own practice. - Tamara Ownsworth, Griffith University, Australia Seventeen cogent and collaboratively written case studies provide convincing evidence that holistic approaches to the neuropsychological rehabilitation of individuals following brain injuries can produce optimal outcomes. This book should be on the assigned bibliography of students and novices; as well as on the must-read list of experienced teachers, researchers and clinicians in our field. - Yehuda Ben-Yishay