1 / 15

Benefits of local brain injury services Case histories from South Wales

Benefits of local brain injury services Case histories from South Wales. Dr David Abankwa Consultant in Rehabilitation Medicine 13 th November 2013. John. 38 year old male TBI following assault

amish
Download Presentation

Benefits of local brain injury services Case histories from South Wales

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Benefits of local brain injury servicesCase histories from South Wales Dr David Abankwa Consultant in Rehabilitation Medicine 13th November 2013

  2. John • 38 year old male • TBI following assault • Initially managed conservatively, but readmitted for evacuation of bilateral chronic SDH via burr holes, transferred to local DGH and discharged home • History of excessive use of alcohol • Post TBI epilepsy, on Phenytoin • Parents in England, was living with partner in West Wales

  3. John • Seen in clinic after six months(? reason for delay) • C/o headaches, confusion, poor memory, tremor of hand • Carer (friend) reported “change in personality” – less outgoing than previously • Housebound due to fear of having more seizures

  4. John • Outcome of consultation: • Brain injury advice/ information given • Advise re pain medication containing codeine • Review of anti-epileptic medication • Offer of inpatient review but patient not keen to come in, • Enquiries about brain injury teams where parents live

  5. John • Admitted to local DGH with “epileptic fits” • Transferred to surgical ward • Referral to NRU and reviewed by me • Significant behaviour component to reported seizures (pseudo-seizures) • Referral sent to Neurologists • Significant conflict with nurses while on ward (lack of understanding of brain injury)

  6. John • Eventually discharged to girlfriend’s house but not allowed to have contact with her children • Neuropsychological assessment showed deterioration in attention and verbal fluency as well as executive functioning • Recommended referral to residential brain injury unit and Neuropsychiatry unit in Whitchurch

  7. John • Currently • Occupational Therapist identified locally, willing to accept referral and identify appropriate person to see • No community brain injury team in his locality • Living with parents in England, community brain injury team identified • Referral to Neuropsychiatry unit

  8. Dave • 42 year old male • TBI when fell off trailer in England • GCS 14/15 but agitated, sedated • CT scan multiple pockets of air in brain, • Managed conservatively • Returned home with no follow up arranged • Previously extremely hardworking but after TBI struggled to maintain successful business which eventually failed

  9. Dave • Problems in marital relationship eventually leading to separation • Depression with three attempts at suicide/ self harm • Under care of local Mental Health services • “Emergency” admission to specialist brain injury unit in England but able to afford only two weeks, found input beneficial

  10. Dave • Had case manager through compensation claim, eventually referred to Rookwood and then to us and Neuropsychiatry • Keen to go back to brain injury unit but issue with funding • Currently under care of OT via Mental Health services in West Wales

  11. Issues • Coordination of services – transfers out of N/surgical unit do not always come to our attention • Lack of services for all patients with ABI • Awareness of our services especially in West Wales • Willingness of patients to travel for residential placements • Accessibility due to funding constraints

  12. How can a local BIRT unit help us? • Geographical accessibility • Organisation with national/ international reputation • Evidence base for interventions including economic benefit • Long term follow up for clients discharged from their units

  13. Barriers to access • Funding • Application usually done via IPFR route which requires the demonstration of “exceptionality” • Eligibility of patients for CHC funding can be hard to demonstrate using “decision support tool” • Need to demonstrate cost benefit • Arguments regarding whether responsibility is health or social

  14. Thoughts …. • Provision of non residential services, possibly in a location closer to areas of greatest need (Ceredigion, Pembs) • Joint projects with NHS and voluntary sector organisations eg Headway • Considerations about equity of access • Helping to make a case to Commissioners re benefits of unit • In due course local “good news” stories can help

  15. Questions?

More Related