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About
the Neurorehabilitation Intensive Program
at Northeast Center for Special Care |
Recognized as a leader in brain injury
rehabilitation, Northeast Center for Special Care is well known for
achieving positive outcomes for our Resident-Neighbors. Over
the years our talented staff has helped individuals with brain
injury to re-learn and re-acquire skills that are necessary to live
in the most integrated settings possible.
Our medical, therapeutic, fine and performing arts, physical fitness and wellness
programs have assisted our Resident-Neighbors cognitively,
physically, socially, emotionally and spiritually. Our program graduates are now living all over New York State and
around the country in community settings, living and working, and
reconnected with their communities, families, and friends once
again.
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What
is the Neurorehabilitation Intensive Program Designed to do?
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Our Neurorehabilitation Intensive Program
is a specialty traumatic brain injury rehabilitation program that is
designed to
incorporate our traditional and non-traditional modes of
rehabilitation into a structured, intensive program of
brain injury rehabilitation focused on our mission of recovery and
community reentry. All of this performed on-campus, in our stunning
residential, state-of-art rehabilitation center.
The Neurorehabilitation Intensive Program is a sixty-bed program
under the supervision of a highly trained and experienced management
team consisting of a behavioral neurolopsychologist, psychiatrist, brain injury program
director, and registered nurse manager.
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Treatment
goals are individualized and participants work to meet multiple
goals. |

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Who is the Neurorehabilitation Intensive Program intended for?
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Candidates
are individuals who have had a brain injury who are medically
stable and who require intensive cognitive, behavioral,
executive functioning and
physical rehabilitation.
- Candidates
may or may not have received rehabilitation while in the
hospital.
- Some
may have returned to the Community after acute rehabilitation
but experienced problems, typically as a ongoing cognitive
and/or behavioral difficulties.
There
are no time limits on when the initial injury occurred.
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