by Dr. Diane Roberts Stoler, Ed.D. | Mar 24, 2017 | Alternative Treatments, Brain Health
As mentioned in my previous blogs, March is Brain Injury Awareness Month. I want to bring awareness to the fact that sleep problems can be a result of a brain injury, such as concussion (mild traumatic brain injury). Common complaints I hear…
by Dr. Diane Roberts Stoler, Ed.D. | Mar 15, 2017 | Brain Health, Brain Rehabilitation, Integrative Expert Team
The moment you hear the doctor say you have a brain injury your life stops, no different than if you were told that you have Cancer. Your first reaction is numbness, and then fear sets in. I know personally, for I was diagnosed with both!
by Dr. Diane Roberts Stoler, Ed.D. | Mar 7, 2017 | Brain Health, Brain Rehabilitation, Personal Experiences
Brain Injury But You Look So Good WomanMarch is Brain Injury Awareness Month. It is also the anniversary of my own brain injury. I still remember vividly months after my 60 mile-an-hour head-on auto accident, people would say, “But, You Look So Good!” This is often the case with survivors of a brain injury, because brain injuries are not visible. Although I appeared well on the outside, I was not the same person I was prior to sustaining a brain injury and I faced many challenges. I would often turn away from a person, and turn back to the same person, only to discover that to me they were a new person. I would say, “Hi, have we met before?” Often people, depending on your age, misunderstand and think you have early dementia.
There is no doubt that life is different after a traumatic brain injury. It can change every facet of one’s life. Statistics show that there is a higher divorce rate for, and increased emotional abandonment of, people who incur disabilities. In my own recovery, I found that the loss of people I depended on to care for me was a major loss. And then there is grief. Grieving the loss of the person you used to be is not only normal, but it is a necessary part of recovery.
How can anyone see the severity of your condition in order to understand what you are going through? They can’t. People who suffer a concussion (mild traumatic brain injury), or other types of brain injuries, are often judged for not being able to resume normal activities because their injury is invisible. Brain injury survivors are often times misdiagnosed, misunderstood, and under-funded.
Mild and Moderate Brain Injury is the #1 misdiagnosed condition worldwide. Every 15 minutes a concussion occurs. The leading causes of concussion include falls, auto accidents, sports, recreational injury, and domestic violence, along with blast injury from combat IED (Improvised Explosive Device). There are over 20,000 people who sustained a blast injury from the bombing explosion in Boston Marathon in 2013, who are possibly still unaware because “They Look So Good.” Rather most or all of the 20,000 individuals are aware of experiencing an awful trauma and probably have confused their symptoms with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), since many of the symptoms of a brain injury, specifically Post Concussion Syndrome (PCS) do overlap. See the table below.
by Dr. Diane Roberts Stoler, Ed.D. | Jan 16, 2017 | Brain Health
Brain Health – How it Affects Your Life Brain Health How it Affects Every Aspect of Your Life What is brain health? You don’t hear nearly as much about keeping your brain healthy as you do about the importance of keeping your body healthy. Yet, what you do to... by Dr. Diane Roberts Stoler, Ed.D. | Jan 3, 2017 | Brain Health
Concussions, knowingly or unknowingly, can result from automobile accidents caused by the extreme weather conditions our country has been experiencing over the past few months. Blizzards in the West, the Lake effect in the Mid-West, major snow storms in the Northeast,... by Dr. Diane Roberts Stoler, Ed.D. | Nov 29, 2016 | Brain Health, Practical Suggestions
Post Election Anxiety and Depression Are you one of the 320 million people who are reacting to the recent presidential election? As you gather, you are not alone. There has never been in the history of U.S. politics a more anxiety inducing pre and post...