View allAll Photos Tagged strokerecovery

Sprouting connections in the brain: Adding GDF10 to neurons in a dish results in the formation of new connections between brain cells. This process may lead to recovery after stroke.

More information: www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/scientists-identify...

 

Courtesy of S. Thomas Carmichael, M.D., Ph.D., David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California Los Angeles

 

This image is not owned by the NIH. It is shared with the public under license. If you have a question about using or reproducing this image, please contact the creator listed in the credits. All rights to the work remain with the original creator.

 

NIH funding from: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)

My caregiver couldn't come today, so I tried to do the dishes by myself, with only one hand. It was almost two years since my stroke.

DAY 2: OUR BODY, OUR BREATH

 

HOW DID FOCUSING ON SOME DEEP BREATHS FEEL FOR YOU AS YOU TOOK YOUR SELFIE? DID YOU NOTICE THE URGE TO HOLD YOUR BREATH?<

 

I think it's SO common for us to hold our breath in photos but that disconnects us from our body and enhances any anxiety in our body that might be coming up. How did focusing on the breath feel for you?

 

As I received my IV antibiotics therapy this afternoon I sat up with my hand resting on my chest. With my eyes closed, I breathed a long, slow breath in through my nose, which I held a few seconds before letting it go in a long, slow exhale through my mouth.

 

Breathe in… breathe out.

 

The air felt warm coming in through my mask, & even warmer as it escaped around my tongue which I kept planted firmly against the roof of my mouth.

 

Breathe in… breathe out.

 

It’s something I used to do with more regularity, usually at the start of a meditation, but it’s something I haven’t done in months. Maybe even in years.

 

Breathe in… breathe out.

 

Last week, Facebook reminded me how 2 years had passed since I was released from the mental health unit at Abbotsford Regional Hospital following a suicide attempt in my car that was parked in the driveway of my Mom’s. On the 1st day of my hospitalization I was confined on suicide watch, in an empty room save for a broken toilet in the corner, a plastic mattress on the floor, & a camera looking down at me. That afternoon I sat breathing, & reciting the Ho’Oponopono prayer again & again. Eventually, I started to sob. It was both cathartic & terrifying.

 

Breathe in… breathe out.

 

It was an easier habit to occupy during that hospitalization, without the trappings of a smart phone to mindlessly scroll through as you weren’t allowed to have them. Today took me back to those moments, moments I didn’t have during the hospitalization after my stroke, mainly because they don’t take your smart phone away after a stroke. Only after a mental collapse.

 

WHAT ARE SOME OTHER TOOLS FOR GROUNDING THAT YOU USE IN OTHER PARTS OF YOUR LIFE?

 

Ponder what tools or actions you take part in to get grounded. Maybe it's making a cup of tea. Maybe it is feeling your feet on the ground or doing mountain pose? Maybe it is noticing your senses. Or maybe it is a crystal you like to hold or a stone in your pocket that helps you get grounded. List them here! And then ponder...could we include some of these as part of our process this month? Could we make ourselves a cup of tea as we're reading the class activities and get grounded before we take our selfie? Or feel the ground beneath our feet before we pick up our camera?

 

Sometimes the bandages on my feet aren’t secure & they end up falling off. I then have to rewrap them, as I had done everyday since I hurt my foot in early July until I went to the ER on August 14. The act of treating the wounds myself was meditative. I’d sit in silence, gently rubbing medicated cream into my feet before wrapping gauze around the toes which I secured with medical grade first aid tape. These motions were meditative as my mind flowed to the present moment, only getting frustrated when the tape didn’t rip cleanly from the roll.

 

Breathe in… Breathe out.

 

(275/365).

 

This was originally posted on Instagram.

 

Today’s photo prompt and reflective journaling questions for today was a part of the BE YOUR OWN BELOVED photo workshop challenge which is run several times throughout the year by photographer VIVIENNE McMASTER. It’s well worth signing up for, and doing alongside other participants.

HOW HAS IT BEEN EMERGING INTO THIS EXPERIENCE?

 

Today's prompt is all about emerging into the process and our photo using one of my favourite creative ways to take a photo. It's a great one to help us emerge a bit more into the photo and this experience. How has it been emerging into the experience as a whole far?

 

Today was truly tiring. By the time I got to my Mom’s, I wanted nothing more than to just sleep the night away. All day, it felt like I could do nothing right. This morning, I slept in. Again. It’s what usually happens in my life when my insomnia leaves me tossing and turning, endlessly scrolling on my smartphone or thumbing through a half-finished book. I don’t bother having the television on, although sometimes I watch a movie or television show on my phone. Before my stroke sometimes I’d lay on my side and sketch in a sketchbook, fooling around with different coloured pencil techniques. But since my stroke I haven’t even done that, even though my physiotherapists have said it would be good to help rebuild the connections between my brain and my body. I don’t even enjoy myself that way some people do late at night. The stroke impacted my ability to be a man, and the various heart and antidepressants they have me on also leave me feeling empty inside when it comes to intimacy. Reflecting back, I don’t think I even took my morning medication. And by the time I was ready to face the world, it was after 1 in the afternoon.

 

I first went to Peace Arch Hospital where the elevator ride to the sixth floor felt like it took a hour, stopping at almost every floor with little to no people riding with me. I went to the IV Therapy clinic, to get a new copy of the bloodwork requisition form I needed, as I’d misplaced the one I was given a week ago to take with me to my 2:30 LifeLabs appointment. The nurse obliged, disappearing for awhile into a back office before coming back down the hall with the all important paper: my passport for another month of weekly tests. The bright light of the afternoon sun had broken through the clouds and shone down the corridor, making me squint a little & placing a hazy aura of white light around her silhouetted figure. I thanked her & left, feeling confident I’d get to the lab on time. Thankfully I did make it to LifeLabs on time, But LifeLabs rejected the form I was given, as they were adamant that there is no CP6 test the form asked for (which I later googled & learned stands for Chemistry Profile 6, or Chemistry Panel 6 in British Columbia). So I had to leave, with the hope I could get a third form during my IV appointment at 4.

 

I next went to Choices Market, as my Mum wanted one of their cooked chickens, which they didn’t have. So I got some slices of their own baked maple glaze ham, and a few other things before dropping it all off at Mum’s just in time to head back to the hospital for day 50 of my antibiotics IV. The same nurse who gave me the purportedly wrong form found it funny that LifeLabs didn’t know what CP6 was, and I heard her in the hallway joking about it with a few other nurses. They felt bad I’d been sent away. She also changed the bandages on my feet and toes, taking time to gently clean each toe. She told me that she was going to book time for me with a wound specialist on Friday to remove some of the hardened calloused skin that if left on the foot could stop the wounds from fully healing properly.

 

I then got a large bowl of pozole to go for my dinner from a local Mexican restaurant, Ay Chihuahua, as well as a couple of enchiladas, some rice, and refried beans. I then drove over to get something for my Mum from Boston Pizza, specifically, Boston’s Mac n Cheese. I had placed the order online before leaving the hospital, & I added shrimp as a surprise I thought she’d enjoy. But when she dug into it at home I found the addition was something didn’t like. At first she thought they were hunks of cheese to which I said “…no, those are shrimp. It had an option to add protein so I thought you might enjoy shrimp.”

 

She bit into a piece, spitting it out almost immediately. “It’s dry,” she replied with disappointing frustration. “Next time, just get me Mac n Cheese. Nothing else.”

 

My heart sank, as it seems whenever we get takeaway something is wrong with Mum’s meal. The only positive today was that I got her meal home quickly, so it was still hot. “I’m sorry,” I said, to which she said “…don’t be, it’s not your fault.”

 

I USED THE WORD 'EMERGING' BECAUSE I THINK IT'S IMPORTANT TO LET OURSELVES EASE INTO THE PROCESS. WHAT ARE THE COMFORT ZONES YOU'RE NOTICING SO FAR?

 

Are you noticing that some prompts are more outside your comfort zones than others? If you find yourself coming up against a comfort zone, could you let yourself use a tool like this and emerge into the photo gently rather than push yourself and make it all or nothing? Can you think of any other times you let yourself stretch into an experience, step by step and let yourself emerge gently?

 

After eating, I went to the guest room at Mum’s, which since COVID has become my home away from home. In fact, since my stroke & my issues with my feet, I haven’t been to my own place much at all in 2023. I crawled into bed and my little dog Kira jumped up to snuggle down next to me. My head throbbed as I mindlessly scrolled YouTube on my iPhone. Soon, I fell asleep. A few hours later my Mum woke me up, asking if I’d turned in for the evening and saying the garbage had to go out. She then looked down at the fan next to my bed, saw that it was dusty and that it needed to be wiped clean “…as it might catch fire!” She then went into the bathroom to get a cloth. I got up to attend to the garbage, & to make tea. That’s when we got into words, this time over the state of the guest room toilet which I haven’t cleaned since August. It’s these little messes that sets her off, as over time they’ve added up bit by bit. Every other day now the frustration over my laziness boils over into a war of words between us. The worst part is that I’m not mindful when Mum gets upset, my empathic nature picks up on her exasperation, raising the heat in my veins as well. It’s something I’m not proud of. It’s something I wish I could deal with better. I’m tired of my anxiety, depression, and now the 50 days of antibiotic therapy, all of which drag me down. Little victories of tackling the messes in my life seem few & far between, as I find it impossible to emerge from beneath their weighted strain that pulls me down. I want to get better, I long for it, cry for it, hell, I’d even die for it.

 

This was originally posted on Instagram.

 

Today’s photo prompt and reflective journaling questions for today was a part of the BE YOUR OWN BELOVED photo workshop challenge which is run several times throughout the year by photographer VIVIENNE McMASTER. It’s well worth signing up for, and doing alongside other participants.

The world's largest interdisciplinary rehabilitation research event:

ACRM.org/2019

 

Call for Proposals: ACRM.org/call

 

REGISTER: ACRM.org/regnow

Photo Credit: Andrew Heavens

TED2008

DAY 4: THE STORY OF YOU

 

Today we're exploring tell your story, your body's story. Let's get inspired by one part of our bodies and tell their story, focusing on a part of your body you can invite in compassion towards through this story.

 

You might use some of these suggestions or create your own. Let some of those stories of you spill out onto this page and into your photo today.

 

THESE FEET HAVE TAKEN ME...

 

THESE ARMS HAVE HELD...

 

THIS BELLY HAS NOURISHED...

 

THESE HANDS HAVE CREATED...

 

THESE EYES HAVE SEEN...

 

THESE EARS HAVE HEARD...

 

These hands have created a vanilla sundae with whipped cream, chocolate syrup, & a maraschino cherry in a small clear glass desert bowl with a short stem & pedestal - only the sundae itself was crafted out of melted wax crayons for an art project Ms Reed had our grade 5 class make.

 

The fingers of these hands have created the sound of music as they learned to dance across the ivory keys of the wood grained upright Yamaha piano my parents enrolled me to learn when I was ever so young. And these hands wiped away tears from my eyes on the days I’d have a temper tantrum, fighting with Mum over not wanting to practice.

 

These hands have created pencil drawings of the Cariboo-Chilcotin region I grew up surrounded by, in the heart of British Columbia, Canada when I was twelve years old - inspired by the pen & ink drawings of Canadian artist Al Ranger whose book “The Cariboo: Sketches, Maps & Trip Notes by Al Ranger” still has a place on my shelf today. One of those drawings won an honourable mention at a retreat in Portland, Oregon I attended through my first high school, the White Rock Christian Academy.

 

These hands have created oil paintings on canvas at the age of fourteen, when I told my Mum I wanted to learn how to paint like that easy going painted on television, Bob Ross. Somehow Mum found a local woman, Artist Vee Hansen, who ran a small framing & arts supplies store that also offered classes for adults. She let me join her class of adult painters, where I caught on quickly, recreating a scene of Mt St Helen’s before its explosion. It was a curriculum that eventually replaced playing the piano, a decision I’ve often regretted as I got older. But the painting has been something I’ve continued to do, on & off, ever since.

 

These hands have created a scar in me, when I woke to find them frozen with a tingling sensation akin to the feeling one has when their foot falls asleep. I’d felt sick before going to bed that night on the last day of January 2023, so much so I remember taking some nighttime cold & flu medication before falling asleep early, around 7pm. Around 10pm I remember waking from my slumber to a strange sensitivity that ran up my arms, into my chest & down my right leg. I remember laying in bed, slightly scared as I wondered what was happening as the awareness of something normal returned to my left side. I stumbled out of bed, & through my fog I wandered down the hallway to the kitchen to find my Mum, and explain to her how I was feeling. FAST, the acronym society uses to identify the advancing onset of a stroke didn’t seem to apply to me. FAST, but my Face wasn’t droopy. FAST, but I could lift my Arms above my head. FAST, but my Speech wasn’t impaired. So I decided to return to bed, hopeful the feeling in the rest of my body would return by morning, just as it had in my left side just a few moments before.

 

But it didn’t. I woke again around 6am, & struggled to even manoeuvre to the toilet. Pulling down my pyjama bottoms was a struggle, & wiping my own ass felt impossible due to that damn lingering sensation of a tingling numbness in my arm & what was my once dominant right hand. I flushed as it took all my strength to hoist myself up onto my legs, & I stumbled down the hallway to the entrance to the garage.

 

I sloppily stuffed my feet into my shoes, lumbering across the garage to go outside. There, I trudged through the snow to the mailbox that hadn’t been checked in days. I made it, collected the few pieces of junk mail in my left hand, and headed back towards the house only to find my right shoe had slipped off near the foot of the driveway not long after I had ventured out. It scared me that my bare skin hadn’t even noticed the cold, damp, snow as my foot took slow step after slow step to the community mailbox a block away from the house. Something was wrong.

 

But I still decided to ignore my aching distant desire to call 911, instead I chose to sleep some more. So, when I woke again around 11am, almost 13 hours after a part of my body decided to go on some kinda permanent vacation, I finally made the decision to call 911. After being taken to the hospital by ambulance around 2pm, emergency room staff put me through a barrage of tests. I remember the sound of my gurney’s smooth wheels gliding along the white medical grade vinyl flooring with grey speckled spots as I watched the two by four ceiling tiles pass by overhead, broken up by panels of fluorescent light tubes that lit our path. I was still conscious when a doctor came to my emergency room bedside to break the news to me. It was now around 10pm, almost 24 hours after I had awakened to my new reality of which this middle aged man offered clarity without comfort: I had suffered a stroke.

 

A stroke. Something old people have. A stroke. His words were scolding, for my not coming in right away, as any of the pharmaceutical cocktails they could have given me would now be ineffective. A tear streamed down my face. I’m certain anyone could have smelled the fear that was wound deep in my being at that moment in time. A stroke. Sometimes called a brain attack. An event the CDC describes as occurring “…when something blocks blood supply to part of the brain or when a blood vessel in the brain bursts. In either case, parts of the brain become damaged or die. A stroke can cause lasting brain damage, long-term disability, or even death…” A stroke.

 

Part of my brain was damaged. Part of my brain was dead. This was my new reality. Would these hands ever create anything ever again? Not knowing was the most terrifying of all. I sobbed deeply with the wail of a moan, a broken cante jondo. Nothing prepares you for these things. For things that have the potential to change the trajectory of the rest of your life.

 

(277/365).

 

This was originally posted on Instagram.

 

Today’s photo prompt and reflective journaling questions for today was a part of the BE YOUR OWN BELOVED photo workshop challenge which is run several times throughout the year by photographer VIVIENNE McMASTER. It’s well worth signing up for, and doing alongside other participants.

OPEN ACCESS: Archives of Rehabilitation Research & Clinical Translation

An open access journal serving the rehabilitation community

 

ACRM.org/open

THE NIH TOOLBOX: STATE OF THE ART OUTCOME MEASURES FOR REHABILITATION PRACTICE AND RESEARCH IC7

BY: Julie Hook, MBA, PhD, ABPP, Research Associate Professor, NIH Toolbox Product Manager, Northwestern University

 

MORE & REGISTER: acrm.org/meetings/2019-spring-meeting/agenda/ic7/

OPEN ACCESS: Archives of Rehabilitation Research & Clinical Translation

An open access journal serving the rehabilitation community

 

ACRM.org/open

ACRM COGNITIVE REHABILITATION TRAINING

 

Two-Day workshop

SUN - MON 6 - 7 NOV 2022

 

MORE & REGISTER: ACRM.org/cogchi

 

WHO SHOULD ATTEND? All kinds of professionals who want to up their game and family members and caregivers and welcome, too. Common titles are: speech-language professionals, psychologists, occupational and physical therapists, physicians and other professionals serving people with brain injuries.

  

ENHANCING STROKE SURVIVORS’ CARE TRANSITIONS AND OUTCOMES IC11

BY: Janet Bettger, ScD, FAHA & more

 

MORE & REGISTER: acrm.org/meetings/2019-spring-meeting/agenda/ic11/

OPEN ACCESS: Archives of Rehabilitation Research & Clinical Translation

An open access journal serving the rehabilitation community

 

ACRM.org/open

Non-member SPECIAL 20% OFF

 

ACRM COGNITIVE REHABILITATION TRAINING

 

Two-Day workshop

SUN - MON 3 - 4 NOV

 

WHO SHOULD ATTEND? All kinds of professionals who want to up their game and family members and caregivers and welcome, too. Common titles are: speech-language professionals, psychologists, occupational and physical therapists, physicians and other professionals serving people with brain injuries.

 

MORE & REGISTER: ACRM.org/cogchi

Don't be left out in the cold. It's warm & collaborative at ACRM. Especially in Dallas Fall 2018. ACRM Annual Conference CALL for Proposals: acrm.org/submit

Contraversive Pushing: Development and Implementation of an Evidence-Based Protocol for Assessment and Treatment (634295)

 

MORE & REGISTER: cdmcd.co/XPQ4r

 

World’s largest rehabilitation research event: ACRM Annual Conference 2019 CHICAGO :: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & recieve the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

DISCOVER the ACRM Video Library: ACRM.org/resources/video-libr...

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

ACRM.org/

Official Training Course: Academy of Certified Brain Injury Specialists

 

CHICAGO HILTON: TWO-DAY COURSE: 12 – 13 April 2019

 

REGISTER: ACRM.org/acbis

SPECIAL SYMPOSIUM: Keys to Improving the

State of Stroke Recovery

 

PRESENTER: Nick Ward, MD, FRCP,

Professor of Clinical Neurology and Neurorehabilitation, University College London

 

ACRM.org/specials

 

Join this line-up of incredible presenters. Submit your proposal today: ACRM.org/call

 

ACRM 99th Annual Conference #ACRM2022

Progress in Rehabilitation Research | Translation to Clinical Practice

8 – 11 NOV 2022 // PRE-CON: 6 – 8 NOV 2022

CHICAGO Hilton

ACRM.org/2022

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM holds the world’s largest interdisciplinary rehabilitation research event every fall: the ACRM Annual Conference: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

Call for Proposals: ACRM.org/call

REGISTER: ACRM.org/register

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

ACRM.org/

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

 

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & receive the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

 

ACRM has products and opportunities to grow your business because we realize that is mission-critical in order to IMPROVE LIVES. Sponsor, Exhibit, Advertise with ACRM — ACRM.org/sales

 

Join ACRM: my.ACRM.org

 

(badge)

S6 SPECIAL Symposium — STROKE:

Clinical Primer on Motor Priming: Implications for Post-Stroke Functional Recovery

 

PRESENTERS:

Sangeetha Madhavan, PT, PhD, Professor, University of Illinois, Chicago

Chicago, Illinois, United States

Mary E. Stoykov, OTR/L, PhD, Research Scientist, Associate Professor

Shirley Ryan Ability Lab, Chicago, Illinois, United States

  

ACRM.org/specials

 

Join this line-up of incredible presenters. Submit your proposal today: ACRM.org/call

 

ACRM 99th Annual Conference #ACRM2022

Progress in Rehabilitation Research | Translation to Clinical Practice

8 – 11 NOV 2022 // PRE-CON: 6 – 8 NOV 2022

CHICAGO Hilton

ACRM.org/2022

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM holds the world’s largest interdisciplinary rehabilitation research event every fall: the ACRM Annual Conference: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

Call for Proposals: ACRM.org/call

REGISTER: ACRM.org/register

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

ACRM.org/

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

 

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & receive the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

 

ACRM has products and opportunities to grow your business because we realize that is mission-critical in order to IMPROVE LIVES. Sponsor, Exhibit, Advertise with ACRM — ACRM.org/sales

 

Join ACRM: my.ACRM.org

 

(badge)

Investigating a Comprehensive Outpatient Stroke Recovery Program Utilizing Interval Cardiac Rehabilitation (420335)

 

MORE & REGISTER: goo.gl/7TkCYj

MORE & REGISTER: ACRM.org/webinar17June

 

17 June // 5:00-6:00 PM ET

"Creating a Telehealth Program in Metropolitan and Rural Environments while Responding to a Pandemic: The Lessons Learned"

 

With guest speakers, Brian Hull, PT, DPT, MBA and Bryan Kolberg, PsyD, ABPP

 

This webinar will examine the essential steps of telehealth program creation; and how to apply lessons learned to respond to future pandemics.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM is the professional home for those who want the latest physical medicine and rehabilitation research. The whole rehab team is welcome — not matter your title.

 

ACRM will be 100% Virtual in 2021 with an in-person option for the ACRM 98th Annual Conference — Dallas

 

ACRM.org/call

 

CORE CONFERENCE: 26 – 29 SEPT 2021; PRE-CON: 24 – 26 SEPT

  

Progress in Rehabilitation Research — translation to clinical practice

 

make your RESEARCH MATTER MORE

Call for Proposals — Submission details & deadlines: ACRM.org/2021

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ACRM holds the world’s largest interdisciplinary rehabilitation research event every fall: the ACRM Annual Conference: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

Call for Proposals: ACRM.org/call

REGISTER: ACRM.org/register

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

ACRM.org/

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

 

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & receive the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

 

ACRM has products and opportunities to grow your business because we realize that is mission-critical in order to IMPROVE LIVES. Sponsor, Exhibit, Advertise with ACRM — ACRM.org/sales

 

Join ACRM: my.ACRM.org

  

(box ad)

Join this incredible group of faculty. Call for Late-Breaking Proposals is NOW OPEN. Apply now to submit your oral paper or scientific poster: InteragencyConferenceTBI.org/call Published papers & poster get published in the Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

 

MORE & REGISTER: ACRM.org/823474

 

Pioneering an Effective Stroke Rehabilitation Paradigm During the Acute Care Hospitalization

Nneka L. Ifejika, MD, MPH, Section Chief of Stroke Rehabilitation; Associate Professor PM&R, Neurology, Neruotherapeutics, UT Southwestern Medical Center

 

Thursday, October 22, 2020 4:45 PM – 6:00 PM EST

 

97th Annual ACRM Conference: Progress in Rehabilitation Research — Translation to Clinical Practice

 

Nneka L. Ifejika, MD, MPH, Section Chief of Stroke Rehabilitation; Associate Professor PM&R, Neurology, Neruotherapeutics, UT Southwestern Medical Center

 

ATLANTA Hilton

21 – 24 October 2020 // Core Conference

19 – 21 October 2020 // Pre-Conference

 

ACRMconference.org/

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ACRM is truly interdisciplinary. Whatever your title, you are welcome & needed here: as a member & at ACRM events. Everyone is welcome at ACRM.

 

Meet us live in person at the ACRM Annual Conference every Fall or sooner as a member ACRM.org/

  

JOIN US to advance the field of rehabilitation & IMPROVE LIVES including your own.

ACRM has the world’s largest rehabilitation research event held every fall: ACRM Annual Conference :: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org/

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & receive the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

DISCOVER the ACRM Video Library: ACRM.org/resources/video-libr...

ANNUAL CONFERENCE: ACRMconference.org :: the world’s largest interdisciplinary rehabilitation research event held every fall.

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research.

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

ACRM.org/

Beyond Evidence-Based Practice: Using Implementation Science to Improve Stroke Rehabilitation (421494)

 

MORE & REGISTER: goo.gl/dBsyMq

OPEN ACCESS: Archives of Rehabilitation Research & Clinical Translation

An open access journal serving the rehabilitation community

 

ACRM.org/open

OPEN ACCESS: Archives of Rehabilitation Research & Clinical Translation

An open access journal serving the rehabilitation community

 

ACRM.org/open

OPEN ACCESS: Archives of Rehabilitation Research & Clinical Translation

An open access journal serving the rehabilitation community

 

ACRM.org/open

Physical and Occupational therapy for my father while recovering from a right frontal lobe stroke.

Don't miss out on SAVING up to 40% with Early Bird rates >>> REGISTER NOW >>> ACRM.org/register

ACRM Annual Conference CHICAGO 2019

 

SEE THE PROGRAM PDF: ACRM.org/poster

 

SEE THE PROGRAM ONLINE: ACRM.org/op

Meet us live in-person at the ACRM Annual Conference every Fall or sooner as a member...

 

ACRM.org/stroke

 

Memberships from $0.

 

_________________

 

Every Fall, ACRM holds the largest interdisciplinary rehabilitation research event every: the ACRM Annual Conference :: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

For information on exhibiting, sponsoring, and advertising opportunities please contact sales@ACRM.org or phone +1.703.435.5335 or use this form ACRM.org/salesform.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

For the LOVE of rehabilitation research BE HERE

At #ACRM, all members of the rehabilitation team are warmly welcomed in the spirit of helping to IMPROVE LIVES

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

 

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

 

DISCOVER ACRM Member Benefits

ACRM.org/

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

 

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & receive the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

Innovative Augmented-Reality Based Customized Gaming Solutions for Home Exercises Following Stroke (626651)

 

MORE & REGISTER: cdmcd.co/M4AdB

 

World’s largest rehabilitation research event: ACRM Annual Conference 2019 CHICAGO :: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & recieve the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

DISCOVER the ACRM Video Library: ACRM.org/resources/video-libr...

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

ACRM.org/

To get to the right treatment…

You need to know ALL of the strategies

 

• The online course is based on the highly-regarded ACRM Cognitive Rehabilitation Manual

 

ACRM.org/cog

 

Learn & earn 12 CME/CEUs right now... Then join us ... in-person at the two-day training.

 

• Learn at your own pace from anywhere.

• Host! Bring the ACRM Cognitive Rehabilitation Training to your institution — Learn more: ACRM.org/coghost

• More than 3,000 have attended this training course

• 8,000+ Manuals sold.

• SOLID 5-STAR reviews on Amazon.

• 90%+ attendees recommend this course

• Printed Manual included along with clinical forms and worksheets and more in the companion website = $295 Value

• WHO is this for? Physicians, neuropsychologists, therapists and all clinicians serving individuals with brain injury. Family and caregivers of individuals with brain injury may also benefit.

 

MORE & buy now: ACRM.org/cog

  

We believe in Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research. If you do, too, please join us at our

Annual Conference and as a member...

 

World’s largest interdisciplinary rehabilitation research event — the ACRM Annual Conference :: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

DISCOVER ACRM Member Benefits

ACRM.org/

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

 

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & receive the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

 

(badge ad)

MORE & REGISTER: ACRM.org/webinar17June

 

17 June // 5:00-6:00 PM ET

"Creating a Telehealth Program in Metropolitan and Rural Environments while Responding to a Pandemic: The Lessons Learned"

 

With guest speakers, Brian Hull, PT, DPT, MBA and Bryan Kolberg, PsyD, ABPP

 

This webinar will examine the essential steps of telehealth program creation; and how to apply lessons learned to respond to future pandemics.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM is the professional home for those who want the latest physical medicine and rehabilitation research. The whole rehab team is welcome — not matter your title.

 

ACRM will be 100% Virtual in 2021 with an in-person option for the ACRM 98th Annual Conference — Dallas

 

ACRM.org/call

 

CORE CONFERENCE: 26 – 29 SEPT 2021; PRE-CON: 24 – 26 SEPT

  

Progress in Rehabilitation Research — translation to clinical practice

 

make your RESEARCH MATTER MORE

Call for Proposals — Submission details & deadlines: ACRM.org/2021

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ACRM holds the world’s largest interdisciplinary rehabilitation research event every fall: the ACRM Annual Conference: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

Call for Proposals: ACRM.org/call

REGISTER: ACRM.org/register

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

ACRM.org/

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

 

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & receive the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

 

ACRM has products and opportunities to grow your business because we realize that is mission-critical in order to IMPROVE LIVES. Sponsor, Exhibit, Advertise with ACRM — ACRM.org/sales

 

Join ACRM: my.ACRM.org

  

(badge ad)

Get CME / CEUs at 2-day training course coming to DALLAS Hilton Anatole: 28 - 29 SEPT: ACRM.org/cog

Get Published!

Call for Late-Breaking Research Posters

New! Digital posters

 

Get published in THE ARCHIVES with high Impact Factor; NEW 4.3 (July 2023)

 

Big benefits for Presenters

 

CALL for Late-Breaking RESEARCH

Scientific Posters: ACRM.org/late

 

Amplify your work ACRM.org/posters

Spotlight your research, light up your career

 

Submit your poster abstract & get your research farther at ACRM

 

ACRM Annual Conference :: Progress in Rehabilitation Research — Translation to Clinical Practice

  

Make your RESEARCH MATTER MORE

 

Call for Proposals — Submission details & deadlines: ACRM.org/call

 

>>> World’s largest interdisciplinary rehabilitation research event <<<

 

For information on exhibiting, sponsoring, and advertising opportunities please contact sales@ACRM.org or phone +1.703.435.5335 or use this form ACRM.org/salesform.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM holds the largest rehabilitation research event every Fall: ACRM Annual Conference :: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

Call for Proposals: ACRM.org/call

REGISTER now for the best rate: ACRM.org/register

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

 

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

 

DISCOVER ACRM Member Benefits

ACRM.org/

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

 

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & receive the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

Understanding Enablers and Barriers to Using Technology with People with Aphasia (620429)

 

MORE & REGISTER: cdmcd.co/b6drD

 

World’s largest rehabilitation research event: ACRM Annual Conference 2019 CHICAGO :: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & recieve the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

DISCOVER the ACRM Video Library: ACRM.org/resources/video-libr...

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

ACRM.org/

MORE & REGISTER: ACRM.org/webinar 18 Nov

 

18 Nov // 5:30-6:30 PM ET

"Discharge planning for people with aphasia post stroke: The LEAVING checklist"

 

With guest speaker, Deborah Hersh, PhD, FSPA, CPSP

 

This webinar will discuss how to best support the needs of People With Aphasia (PWA) upon discharge.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM is the professional home for those who want the latest physical medicine and rehabilitation research. The whole rehab team is welcome — not matter your title.

 

ACRM will be 100% Virtual in 2021 with an in-person option for the ACRM 98th Annual Conference — Dallas

 

ACRM.org/call

 

CORE CONFERENCE: 26 – 29 SEPT 2021; PRE-CON: 24 – 26 SEPT

  

Progress in Rehabilitation Research — translation to clinical practice

 

make your RESEARCH MATTER MORE

Call for Proposals — Submission details & deadlines: ACRM.org/2021

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ACRM holds the world’s largest interdisciplinary rehabilitation research event every fall: the ACRM Annual Conference: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

Call for Proposals: ACRM.org/call

REGISTER: ACRM.org/register

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

ACRM.org/

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

 

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & receive the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

 

ACRM has products and opportunities to grow your business because we realize that is mission-critical in order to IMPROVE LIVES. Sponsor, Exhibit, Advertise with ACRM — ACRM.org/sales

 

Join ACRM: my.ACRM.org

  

(badge ad)

Different Training Paradigms and Mitochondrial Health after Spinal Cord Injury (419759)

 

MORE & REGISTER: goo.gl/t8EQtk

Impact of Patient Directed Programming During Inpatient Rehabilitation Utilizing Actigraphy Data Post Stroke (594422)

 

MORE & REGISTER: cdmcd.co/7ZAja

 

World’s largest rehabilitation research event: ACRM Annual Conference 2019 CHICAGO :: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & recieve the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

DISCOVER the ACRM Video Library: ACRM.org/resources/video-libr...

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

ACRM.org/

Physical and Occupational therapy for my father while recovering from a right frontal lobe stroke.

Physical and Occupational therapy for my father while recovering from a right frontal lobe stroke.

 

From System Impairments to Participation Barriers: Gait Rehabilitation across the Spectrum (422341)

 

MORE & REGISTER: goo.gl/9UYbyU

DAY 05: OUR REFLECTIONS

 

HAVE YOU EXPLORED TAKING REFLECTIVE PHOTOS BEFORE TODAY? HOW WAS IT FOR YOU?

 

I know for many of us we hear 'reflection' and we think the mirror. And the mirror is often another place like through the camera where we might find old stories come up. We'll connect with the mirror later in class, but today is about reclaiming a playful and inquisitive relationship with our reflection. How did finding your reflection in this way feel?

 

From October 5, 2023: With photo challenges like this, I have to be careful that I don’t overthink a challenge & become paralyzed by the process. So, as I headed out, I reminded myself to keep it simple & just be mindful of recognizing those brief moments when my reflection appears on surfaces that aren’t traditionally considered mirrors.

 

With the injuries to my feet, my adventures have been confined to taking short drives to grocery stores, restaurants, pharmacies, & the hospital. Today was no different, as I drove from my Mom’s to Peace Arch Hospital. After registering, I head to the cafeteria to get an oatmeal cookie, a bottle of water, & a hot tea. When the cafe is closed, I stop to see what the vending machines have. When I was young, they stood as shrines of sugary, addictive junk food. But now they only offer purportedly healthy snack food items in each slot of every row. My finger reaches out to type 1, 4 & 4. The machine’s readout displays the price of a small bag of peanuts: $3.75. I roll my eyes at the price, even though I’ve purchased this item before & knew what it would say. I walk away, deciding not to get anything.

 

HOW IS BUILDING YOUR RELATIONSHIP TO YOURSELF THROUGH THE CAMERA FEELING FOR YOU SO FAR THIS MONTH?

 

We're only on Day 5, but we're already in the process of creating a habit of taking a selfie each day and building a relationship to ourselves through the camera. What has that relationship been in the past between you and a photo? And what would you like it to be like in the future? Proclaim it here in this space...what are some words to describe how you'd like your relationship to seeing yourself in photos be in the future? Open? Kind? Inquisitive? Exciting? Thoughtful? There is no right or wrong here...let whatever is coming up for you have a place to land here!

 

It can be a struggle to stop myself from binging. Crawl out of bed in a depressed state? Head to the kitchen to have a bowl of Corn-Pops; a few slices of toast with either butter, peanut butter, & jam on it, or instead of jam, honey; a muffin, heated with butter; a few glasses of fruit juice; a small yogurt with granola sprinkled on top; & a large cup of tea with milk. Head back to bed. When I’m driving, it can be a challenge not to turn into some place like the Dairy Queen to order a chocolate dipped vanilla soft serve cone, or a peanut buster parfait. And it’s also a challenge not to load up on an extra large popcorn; Reese’s Pieces peanuts wrapped in smooth peanut butter & a crunchy candy shell; as well as an extra large Coca-Cola when I go to the movies.

 

Even writing this reflection in bed makes me wonder what junk may be sitting in the cupboard, the fridge, or hidden in the garage. I haven’t gained weight since my stroke, but it’s a fear. I hate fat Steve. He kept me from being photographed with friends, & in selfies.

 

(278/365).

 

This was originally posted on Instagram.

 

Today’s photo prompt and reflective journaling questions for today was a part of the BE YOUR OWN BELOVED photo workshop challenge which is run several times throughout the year by photographer VIVIENNE McMASTER. It’s well worth signing up for, and doing alongside other participants.

HOT TOPICS IN STROKE: Young stroke and complex needs across the care continuum (60319

 

MORE & REGISTER: cdmcd.co/3BjM9

 

World’s largest rehabilitation research event: ACRM Annual Conference 2019 CHICAGO :: Progress in Rehabilitation Research :: Translation to Clinical Practice :: ACRMconference.org

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

SIGN-UP & receive FREE ACRM eNews: ACRM.org/enews

GET ACTIVE in ACRM & recieve the ARCHIVES of PM&R: ACRM.org/join

DISCOVER the ACRM Video Library: ACRM.org/resources/video-libr...

 

ACRM: American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine: Improving lives through interdisciplinary rehabilitation research

JOIN Us. Be MOVED.

ACRM.org/

Official Training Course: Academy of Certified Brain Injury Specialists

 

CHICAGO HILTON: TWO-DAY COURSE: 12 – 13 April 2019

 

REGISTER: ACRM.org/acbis

Physical and Occupational therapy for my father while recovering from a right frontal lobe stroke.

1 3 4 5