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July 2007 Website of the Month


Northeast Center for Special Care is pleased to feature:

The Brain Injury Recovery Network
http://www.tbirecovery.org


Our website of the month for July 2007 is a work of dedication, love and hope.  The
Brain Injury Recovery Network is the website for a not-for-profit organization started by the parents of Ashleigh Szabo, a young woman who in 1999; was an Ohio high school senior about to graduate and who acquired a traumatic brain injury as a passenger in a car that was involved in a motor vehicle accident.  

Many families who have had children with TBI have created web pages and blogs and websites about their loved-ones (we link to several of them).  These sites are helpful on a number of levels including: communicating with family members and friends who are far away, documenting progress and allowing a public place for other families who have a child or a family member that has experienced a brain injury to come and learn what others are experiencing as well as allowing those visitors to benefit from their wisdom.

The
Brain Injury Recovery Network is unique in that it melds the ongoing story of Ashleigh's rehabilitation with a very useful resource website about traumatic brain Injury.  Ashleigh's story is documented for the visitor along with a blog about her progress, but there is also information and articles to assist other families to quickly learn what they will need to know to help and advocate for their loved-one.

The legacy of traumatic brain injury in the United States has traditionally been families helping families.  The
Brain Injury Recovery Network continues this in a personal way.



IMAGE:  Screen shot of the Brain Injury Recovery Network homepage.  The "Crisis Phase," and "Long Term Phase," links take the visitor to crucial information. Screen shot of the Brain Injury Recovery Network homepage.  The "Crisis Phase," and "Long Term Phase," links take the visitor to crucial information.


We mentioned wisdom and you see that right from the homepage.  Near the top of the page are two boxes.  One box is titled: "Crisis Phase," the other: "Long-Term Phase." A parent or family member with a loved-one who was recently injured who visits the site and who clicks on "Crisis Phase," will be taken to a page that will give them needed information.  The section is broken up into two pages one covering the Emergency Room (ER) and the other for the Intensive Care Unit  (ICU).  

The ER section outlines what to realistically expect in that situation and prepares visitors for the difficult parts of this phase including the initial lack of information and waiting.  There is also encouragement to use the services of the trauma center's Chaplin (for believers) and encouragement to contact close family members right away.  Simple and concise, this section is one of the best we have read of its kind.  One of the common things you hear from families after an acute hospital experience is that there was little information about what to expect.  Many hospitals have computer access for families and more and more people are using mobile devices to access the internet so today it would be a matter of doing a simple search in a waiting room and having this necessary information.

The ICU section is longer.  The section gives the visitor a good to-the-point overview, along with explaining some of the procedures that may be happening and a glossary of equipment and terms that enable the reader to ask informed questions.  There is also a section on possible complications that could occur, and a section on what to realistically expect.  The next section is called "Tips from One Family to Another," this section is "advocacy 101," but specifically related to brain injury.  It includes information on dealing with physicians, staff, other family members, ways to organize yourself and encouragement to develop relationships with doctors, nurses and other families.

Wisdom comes from the experience of supporting and caring for a loved-one after a traumatic brain injury.  Ashleigh's dad, Ernie Szabo told us why they started the organization and website:

We started the site after our own experience of being thrust into the situation where we were being asked to make difficult, life or death decisions concerning our daughter’s care after her very serious brain injury in May, 1999. We searched for information but found very little that could help us quickly understand what was happening and what to expect. We developed our site to try to answer some of those same questions for other victims and families.

The homepage of the Brain Injury Recovery Network has links that take the visitor to two important overviews: "TBI," and an "injury" overview.  The presentation is helpful in that the TBI overview gives you basic information and facts about the actual injury itself.  The "injury" overview is a more expansive section that gives information about different types of brain injury and the potential impact.  This is written from the perspective of a parent and is insightful for any supporting family-member.  In this regard an important point is made in the section: "We think you have to act as if you only have one choice. That choice is to believe and act as if your loved one is going to be completely healed."  There is hope in that statement and this site imparts a lot of hope to anyone with an injured loved-one.

There are two videos on the
Brain Injury Recovery Network.  One is on the homepage and is entitled: "A Day in the Life of Ashleigh Szabo."  Through images and narration you can learn about Ashleigh, her injury and ongoing recovery.  In the images you see something important - support from family and friends.  The other video called "Ashleigh's Brain Injury Story," is located on "Ashleigh's Story," webpage.  It is an important and difficult video to view.  Interviews with Ashleigh's parents along with a video account of her care and recovery is a window into traumatic brain injury that has to be seen in order to really understand the impact of a TBI and the sometimes long process of recovery.  The Szabo family performs a great service by being public with this and allowing people to see their emotions.  That kind of perspective makes this site unique and invaluable for families and friends whose loved-one's have acquired a TBI.

You can also visit an ongoing blog about Ashleigh with updates about her life and rehabilitation.  The blog includes photos which is very important because it allows visitors including parents and family members of newly injured persons the opportunity to see that despite having a TBI - including one that is severe in nature like Asleigh's injury, people survive, they improve and have proactive lives.  It's also important to see what a dedicated, supportive family can mean to the quality of life for someone with a brain injury - even with a high level of acuity.




Screen Shot of Ashleigh's Blog.  Visitor can read about Ashleigh's ongoing rehabilitation.  It is insightful and illustrates the contributions families make to the recovery of their loved-ones.

image:  Screen Shot of Ashleigh's Blog.  Visitor can read about Ashleigh's ongoing rehabilitation.  It is insightful and illustrates the contributions families make to the recovery of their loved-ones.


As an organization, the
Brain Injury Recovery Network operates a toll-free support line.  It is an important tool to assist others.  People can call the support line with questions, inquiries and comments.  It has been quite effective as Ernie Szabo told us:

We have found through scores of calls to our Support Line that peoples needs are as varied as are the types of brain injuries. Calls received close to the time of the injury are typically people seeking information on what to expect and we also encourage them to hang on to their hope and give their loved one every opportunity to recover. Other calls from people who are further out from their injury often are seeking help with support services, insurance issues, and living or work assistance. We also get a number of calls from people with mild brain injuries who are having trouble convincing doctors and others that they have a brain injury and are seeking help coping with deficits, especially emotional and memory issues.

The Brain Injury Recovery Network's website has other resource pages they have created that are geared to providing vital information to assist families of newly injured persons in making decisions about rehabilitation and care.  These pages include: financial and legal issues, insurance issues, alternative therapies, rehab that works, links, a news page and others.  You can view the full menu when you visit their site.  There are also links to other websites and related resources that you can visit from the site.  As we mentioned the Brain Injury Recovery Network is a not-for-profit organization visitors can donate through PayPal on their website and they also have a web store that sells adaptive items online with the proceeds going to support the website the toll-free help line and organization.  You can learn more about the Brain Injury Recovery Network, their purpose and programs when you visit their site.


IMAGE:  Photo of Ashleigh Szabo and her family.  Back row:  L to R Ernie Szabo, Treva Szabo, Lee Szabo and Brent Szabo.  Lower front:  Ashleigh Szabo. A demonstration of strong family support and illustrating the importance of community living for individuals with TBI, Ashleigh Szabo attends a wedding where she was the Maid of Honor.  Back row:  L to R Ernie Szabo, Treva Szabo, Lee Szabo and Brent Szabo.  Lower front:  Ashleigh Szabo.


The
Brain Injury Recovery Network has taken on an important role by creating a website that is a go-to resource for families and friends during the first hours, days and weeks after an injury occurs.  Operating this great website and all it offers involves significant effort.  Ashleigh's brother Brent has volunteered hundreds of hours of his time, unpaid, over the years to create, maintain and expand the site with new resources.  The Brain Injury Recovery Network's mission of the  is truly a family effort.  After several years of operation the website has assisted scores of families during this critical time.  Ernie Szabo noted for us:

We are very proud that we get lots of compliments from people about our site and even have had a few people get back in contact with us to tell us that they feel the information we were able to provide saved their loved one’s life.

A lot can be gleaned from the life and recovery of Ashleigh Szabo and the contributions her parents have made not only to her life but the lives of other TBI survivors and their families.  Northeast Center for Special Care is pleased to present The Brain Injury Recovery Network as our website of the month feature for July, 2007. They are just a click away, and don't forget to bookmark them so you can visit again.


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Disclaimer:  Reference in this web site to any specific organizations, commercial products, process, service, manufacturer, or company does not constitute its endorsement or recommendation by Northeast Center for Special Care.


Do you have a web resource you think we should consider for our website of the month?  Sites can be personal, professional, informative, educational or organizations.  Our primary criteria is that a site be unique in some way and offer it's readers useful information and insight.  Please click on
Suggest-a-Site and let us know about it.

Sites we select will receive a customized award graphic 

IMAGE:  Website of the Month award graphic sample.

Please don't forget to check back with us next month when we highlight another award-winning website.


Website of the Month Archive:

April 2009
March 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
February 2007
December 2006
November 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
January 2006
AVM Survivors Network
BT Buddies
Brain Injury in the UK
Special Needs Toys
Teenagers and Brain Injury prevention
America's Heroes at Work
Shaken Baby Syndrome Resources
Neuroscience for Kids
Head to Head Ministries
Its Not Who I Am
Canine and Abled
Online Support Groups for TBI
Brain Injury Survivor's Guide
Understanding the Brain and Emotions
Disaboom
Upperex.com
The Brain Injury Recovery Network
Hire Heroes, Fisher House, Sew Much Comfort
The Serper Method™
The Woodruff Family Fund
UEA-Life
Logan Magazine
North American Brain Injury Society
Encephalitis Global
Powell River Brain Injury Society
MedlinePlus
Mothers Against Brain Injury
The Healing Exchange Brain Trust
Erienne Romaine
Brain Injury News and Information Blog

 


Questions?  E-mail us:
ncsc@northeastcenter.com



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